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Prostate – Applied Anatomy

Embryology and Development of Prostate Gland

  1. Time: During 3rd month of gestation
  2. Fetal testosterone is converted by 5α-reductase into 5α-Dihydrotestosterone (DHT).
  3. This hormone stimulates urogenital sinus mesenchyme, which in turn stimulates formation of prostatic buds (endodermal outhgrowths) from posterior urogenital sinus epithelium.
  4. Prostatic buds invade into urogenital sinus mesenchyme.
  5. Differentiation:
    • Prostatic bud: Prostate glandular epithelium
      • Inner (central) zone glands develop later
      • Outer (peripheral) zone glands develop earlier
    • Mesenchyme: Prostatic stroma
    • Paired outgrowths from spongy part of urethra: Bulbourethral glands

Size, Shape and Relations of Prostate Gland

Normal adult size: Often compared to the size of a walnut or chestnut (~20-25 grams and 4X2X3 cm)

Shape of prostate: Prostate is conical in shape with:

  1. Base
  2. Apex
  3. Anterior surface
  4. Posterior surface
  5. 2 Lateral surfaces

Relations of Prostate:

Lobar Anatomy of Prostate

The prostatic urethra and the ejaculatory ducts divide prostate into 5 different lobes.

  1. Anterior lobe:
    • Anterior to urethra
    • Devoid of glandular tissue
  2. Posterior lobe:
    • Posterior to urethra and Below the ejaculatory ducts
    • Palpable during DRE (Digital Rectal Examination)
  3. Median or Middle lobe:
    • Between urethra and ejaculatory ducts
    • It’s upper part is related to the bladder trigone.
  4. Lateral lobes:
    • Separated from eachother by prostatic urethra
    • Continuous posteriorly except a shallow vertical groove which separates the 2 lateral lobes

Zonal Anatomy of Prostate

McNeal 1McNeal JE. The zonal anatomy of the prostate. Prostate. 1981;2(1):35-49. PubMed PMID: 7279811. used urethra as a reference point and divided prostate into 4 zones.

  1. Peripheral zone (70% of glandular prostate): lateral to urethra and distal to the verumontanum. Almost all carcinomas arise here.
  2. Central zone (25% of the glandular prostate): surrounds the ejaculatory ducts all the way to the verumontanum
  3. Transition zone (5% of glandular prostate): surrounds the urethra between bladder neck and colliculus. It is the exclusive site of nodular hyperplasia (BPH) origin.
  4. Anterior fibromuscular stroma: nonglandular portion

Capsular Anatomy of Prostate

True capsule:

False capsule:

Prostatic venous plexus lies between the true and false capsule.

Surgical or Pathological capsule:

Functions of the Prostate

1. Prostatic secretion: The prostatic fluid is thin, slightly acidic (pH 6.4) and forms about 20% of semen volume. It contains: spermine (for the motility of sperms), spermidine, prostataglandins (for uterus stimulation), zinc (affects testosterone metabolism of the prostate), citric acid (buffer), immunoglobulins, phosphatases and proteases (sperm liquefaction).

2. Control of urine or semen flow: Prostate acts like a valve – preventing urine flow during ejaculation and permitting urine flow in between.

Vascular Anatomy of Prostate

Arterial Supply

Major: Prostatic arteries arising from the Inferior vesical artery

Additional: Branches from middle rectal artery and Internal pudendal artery

Venous Drainage

Lymph Drainage

Internal iliac nodes

Neural Anatomy of Prostate (Cavernous nerves)

Parasympathetic innervation: hypogastric and pelvic nerves

Sympathetic innervation: peripheral hypogastric ganglion

The neurovascular bundles (NVB) run posterolaterally between the: prostatic capsule, levator fascia and denovillier’s fascia

Prostate Histology

 

The normal appearance of prostate is shown at high magnification. Note the small pink laminated concretion (these are corpora amylacea) in the gland lumen to the left of center. Note the infoldings of the columnar epithelium.

References

  1. Snell Clinical Anatomy
  2. Urology-Textbook.com
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