Seminal Vesicles and Ejaculatory Ducts

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Gross Structure[edit | edit source]

  • Posterior to the bladder and prostate, lateral to the vas deferens
  • The non-obstructed seminal vesicle measures 1.5 cm in width and 5-7 cm in length; 3-4 mL capacity
  • Ureters enter bladder medial to tip of seminal vesicles
  • The joining of the seminal vesicle with the vas deferens creates the ejaculatory duct.
  • Insert figure
  • The ejaculatory ducts are paired structures that empty through the verumontanum into the distal prostatic urethra
  • Insert figure

Microanatomic architecture[edit | edit source]

  • Seminal vesicle has columnar epithelium with goblet cells

Vasculature[edit | edit source]

  • Arterial supply
    • Seminal vesicle: superior and inferior vesical arteries
      • The superior vesical artery branches into the vesiculodeferential artery and supplies the anterior surface of the seminal vesicle in proximity to its tip.
      • The inferior vesical artery branches into the prostatovesicular artery
    • Ejaculatory duct: inferior vesical artery

Innervation[edit | edit source]

  • Seminal vesicles
    • Receive parasympathetic innervation from the pelvic plexus and sympathetic innervation from the hypogastric nerves and the superior lumbar nerves
      • The hypogastric nerve is the nerve that transitions between the superior hypogastric plexus and the pelvic plexus (inferior hypogastric plexus in some texts)
        • The pelvic plexus supplies the viscera of the pelvic cavity
        • The superior hypogastric plexus (in older texts, hypogastric plexus or presacral nerve) is situated on the vertebral bodies anterior to the bifurcation of the abdominal aorta.
      • The hypogastric nerve contains sympathetic fibers descending from the superior hypogastric plexus and parasympathetic fibers ascending from the pelvic plexus§
  • Ejaculatory ducts
    • Innervated by the pelvic plexus

Radiology[edit | edit source]

  • Seminal vesicles
    • Transrectal ultrasonography
      • Appear hypoechoic, compared to the prostate, and are crescent-shaped, paired, and symmetrical.
      • AP diameter > 1.5cm is suggestive of ejaculatory duct obstruction, and may be the cause of low-volume azoospermia
      • A cystic SV mass is presumptively benign, whereas a solid lesion has a very small probability of being malignant, especially if the patient has a primary neoplasm elsewhere
        • Schistosomiasis should be considered when making a differential diagnosis in patients who live in areas where infestation is endemic and have a solid SV mass
      • An absent SV is associated with a 79% risk of ipsilateral renal agenesis
      • CT and MRI can also be used to image the seminal vesicles

Questions[edit | edit source]

  1. What are the normal dimensions of the seminal vesicles?

Answers[edit | edit source]

  1. What are the normal dimensions of the seminal vesicles?
    • Length 5-7cm
    • Width 1.5cm

References[edit | edit source]

  • Wein AJ, Kavoussi LR, Partin AW, Peters CA (eds): CAMPBELL-WALSH UROLOGY, ed 11. Philadelphia, Elsevier, 2015, chap 21