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The urinary bladder is a temporary storage reservoir for urine.
It is located in the pelvic cavity, posterior to the symphysis pubis,
and below the parietal
peritoneum. The size and shape of the urinary bladder
varies with the amount of urine it contains and with pressure it
receives from surrounding organs.
The inner lining of the urinary bladder is a mucous membrane of
transitional epithelium that is continuous with that in the ureters.
When the bladder is empty, the mucosa has numerous folds called
rugae. The rugae and transitional epithelium allow the bladder to
expand as it fills.
The second layer in the walls is the submucosa that supports the
mucous membrane. It is composed of connective tissue with elastic
fibers.
The next layer is the muscularis, which is composed of smooth muscle.
The smooth muscle fibers are interwoven in all directions and collectively
these are called the detrusor muscle. Contraction of this muscle
expels urine from the bladder. On the superior surface, the outer
layer of the bladder wall is parietal peritoneum. In all other regions,
the outer layer is fibrous connective tissue.
There is a triangular area, called the trigone, formed by three
openings in the floor of the urinary bladder. Two of the openings
are from the ureters and form the base of the trigone. Small flaps
of mucosa cover these openings and act as valves that allow urine
to enter the bladder but prevent it from backing up from the bladder
into the ureters. The third opening, at the apex of the trigone,
is the opening into the urethra. A band of the detrusor muscle encircles
this opening to form the internal urethral sphincter.

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