Abstract

AbstractIn a 20‐year‐old human female specimen the nerves to the pelvic organs were dissected and analysed. The gross anatomy of the branches of the pelvic plexus was described. The composition of these nerves was studied and the sizes and distribution of the diameter of a great part of the myelinated nerve fibres were measured and analysed. It was confirmed that the ventral roots S2 and S3 contain many nonmyelinated nerve fibres. There are direct connections between the sacral sympathetic chain and the pelvic plexus. They contain myelinated fibres with sizes as large as 11 μm. There are two different groups of fibres which supply the bladder, one on the dorsal side, mainly nonmyelinated (postganglic sympathetic?), and another group to the lateral side which contains many thin myelinated fibres (parasympathetic preganglionic?). The pelvic plexus and its branches are fixed to the vagina and the rectum. Surgical interventions in this area and perhaps also childbirth can damage the nerve supply to the bladder and the urethra. The functional disturbances of the bladder after such interventions can depend on what group of nerve fibres is most seriously damaged. The large number of thick myelinated fibres which reach the ventro lateral side of the urethra makes it highly probable that these fibres innervate the intrinsic striated urethral musculature. The large number of nonmyelinated nerve fibres in the nerves to the m. levator ani probably innervate smooth muscle tissue which is found in the fasciae of the pelvic floor.

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