Dorsal veins of the penis
In human anatomy, the dorsal veins of the penis comprise the superficial dorsal vein of the penis and the deep dorsal vein of the penis.
Deep dorsal veins of the penis | |
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Details | |
Drains from | penis |
Drains to | Prostatic venous plexus |
Artery | dorsal artery of the penis |
Identifiers | |
Latin | vena dorsalis profunda penis |
Anatomical terminology |
Cavernosal veins of the penis | |
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Details | |
Drains from | penis |
Drains to | Prostatic venous plexus |
Artery | dorsal artery of the penis |
Anatomical terminology |
Para-arterial veins of the penis | |
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Details | |
Drains from | penis |
Drains to | Prostatic venous plexus |
Artery | dorsal artery of the penis |
Anatomical terminology |
Superficial dorsal veins of the penis | |
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Details | |
Drains from | penis |
Drains to | external pudendal vein |
Identifiers | |
Latin | venae dorsales superficiales penis |
Anatomical terminology |
Superficial dorsal vein
The superficial dorsal vein of the penis drains the prepuce and skin of the penis, and, running backward in the subcutaneous tissue, inclines to the right or left, and opens into the corresponding superficial external pudendal vein, a tributary of the great saphenous vein.
In contrast to the deep dorsal vein, it lies outside Buck's fascia.[1]
It is possible for the vein to rupture, which presents in a manner similar to penile fracture.[2]
Deep dorsal vein
The deep dorsal vein of the penis lies beneath the deep fascia of the penis; it receives the blood from the glans penis and corpora cavernosa penis and courses backward in the middle line between the dorsal arteries; near the root of the penis it passes between the two parts of the suspensory ligament and then through an aperture between the arcuate pubic ligament and the transverse ligament of the pelvis, and divides into two branches, which enter the vesical and prostatic plexuses.
The deep vein also communicates below the pubic symphysis with the internal pudendal vein.
Clinical significance
The dorsal veins of the penis can be used for intravenous injections in rats.[3]
Additional images
- The veins of the right half of the male pelvis.
- Veins of the penis.
- Vertical section of bladder, penis, and urethra.
- Transverse section of the penis.
- Anterior abdominal wall, intermediate dissection.
References
This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 676 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)
- ↑ Sauerland, Eberhardt K.; Tank, Patrick W., PhD. (2005). Grant's dissector. Hagerstown, MD: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. p. 101. ISBN 0-7817-5484-4.
- ↑ Perlmutter AE, Roberts L, Farivar-Mohseni H, Zaslau S (2007). "Ruptured superficial dorsal vein of the penis masquerading as a penile fracture: case report". Can J Urol. 14 (4): 3651–2. PMID 17784989.
- ↑ Koch, Michael A. (2006-01-01), Suckow, Mark A.; Weisbroth, Steven H.; Franklin, Craig L. (eds.), "Chapter 18 - Experimental Modeling and Research Methodology", The Laboratory Rat (Second Edition), American College of Laboratory Animal Medicine, Burlington: Academic Press, pp. 587–625, doi:10.1016/b978-012074903-4/50021-2, ISBN 978-0-12-074903-4, retrieved 2021-02-07
External links
- http://anatomy.uams.edu/AnatomyHTML/veins_pelvis&perineum.html
- Anatomy figure: 42:06-02 at Human Anatomy Online, SUNY Downstate Medical Center - "Male urogenital diaphragm."
- perineum at The Anatomy Lesson by Wesley Norman (Georgetown University) (maleugtriangle4)