ureter

metanephric duct

Muscular duct that propels urine from the kidneys to the urinary bladder, or related organs.

Type Muscle
Système corporel Urinary
Structure parente mesoderm-derived structure
Nom latin metanephric duct
FMA ID 9704

Questions fréquentes

What is the path of the ureter from kidney to bladder?
Each ureter is a muscular tube approximately 25–30 cm long that descends retroperitoneally from the renal pelvis of each kidney. It passes over the psoas major muscle, crosses the pelvic brim, and enters the pelvis to reach the posterolateral wall of the urinary bladder. The ureter enters the bladder at an oblique angle (the ureterovesical junction), creating a valve-like mechanism that prevents urine reflux when the bladder contracts.
Where are the three anatomical narrowings of the ureter?
The ureter has three natural constrictions where kidney stones are most likely to become lodged: (1) the ureteropelvic junction (UPJ) where the renal pelvis transitions to the ureter, (2) where the ureter crosses over the iliac blood vessels at the pelvic brim, and (3) the ureterovesical junction (UVJ) where the ureter enters the bladder. These narrowings are the sites of approximately 90% of symptomatic ureteral calculi.
How does the ureter move urine?
Urine movement through the ureter is not passive gravity flow but active peristalsis — coordinated waves of smooth muscle contraction originating in pacemaker cells at the renal pelvis. These peristaltic waves propel discrete boluses of urine from the kidney to the bladder at a rate of 1–5 waves per minute, even when a person is lying horizontally or standing on their head.

Structures associées

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Data sources: Terminologia Anatomica, Foundational Model of Anatomy, Wikidata.