Uterine Tubes
The uterine tubes (formerly called oviducts or fallopian tubes)
conduct the oocyte, discharged monthly from an ovary during
child-bearing years, from the peri-ovarian peritoneal cavity to the uterine cavity. They also provide the usual site of fertilization. The tubes extend laterally from the uterine horns and open
into the peritoneal cavity near the ovaries.
The uterine tubes (approximately 10 cm long) lie in a narrow
mesentery, the mesosalpinx, forming the free anterosuperior
edges of the broad ligaments. In the "ideal" disposition, as typically illustrated, the tubes extend symmetrically posterolaterally to the lateral pelvic walls, where they arch anterior
and superior to the ovaries in the horizontally disposed broad ligament. In reality, as seen in an ultrasound examination, the
tubes are commonly asymmetrically arranged with one or the
other often lying superior and even posterior to the uterus.
The uterine tubes are divisible into four parts, from lateral
to medial:
(1) Infundibulum: the funnel-shaped distal end of the
tube that opens into the peritoneal cavity through the
abdominal ostium. The finger-like processes of the
fimbriated end of the infundibulum (fimbriae) spread
over the medial surface of the ovary; one large ovarian
fimbria is attached to the superior pole of the ovary.
(2) Ampulla: the widest and longest part of the tube, which
begins at the medial end of the infundibulum; fertilization of the oocyte usually occurs in the ampulla.
(3) Isthmus: the thick-walled part of the tube, which enters
the uterine horn.
(4) Uterine part: the short intramural segment of the tube
that passes through the wall of the uterus and opens via
the uterine ostium into the uterine cavity at the uterine
horn.
Arterial Supply and Venous Drainage of Ovaries
and Uterine Tubes
The ovarian arteries arise from the
abdominal aorta and descend
along the posterior abdominal wall. At the pelvic brim, they
cross over the external iliac vessels and enter the suspensory ligaments, approaching the lateral aspects
of the ovaries and uterine tubes. The ascending branches of
the uterine arteries (branches of the internal iliac arteries)
course along the lateral aspects of the uterus to approach
the medial aspects of the ovaries and tubes. Both the ovarian and ascending uterine arteries terminate by bifurcating into ovarian and tubal branches, which supply the ovaries and tubes from opposite ends and anastomose with each other, providing a collateral circulation from
abdominal and pelvic sources to both structures.
Veins draining the ovary form a vine-like pampiniform plexus of veins in the broad ligament near the ovary
and uterine tube. The veins of the plexus usually merge to form a singular ovarian vein, which leaves
the lesser pelvis with the ovarian artery. The right ovarian
vein ascends to enter the inferior vena cava; the left ovarian vein drains into the left renal vein. The tubal
veins drain into the ovarian veins and uterine (uterovaginal)
venous plexus.
Innervation of Ovaries and Uterine Tubes
The
nerve supply derives partly from the ovarian plexus, descending with the ovarian vessels, and partly from the uterine
(pelvic) plexus. The ovaries and uterine tubes
are intraperitoneal and, therefore, are superior to the pelvic
pain line. Thus, visceral afferent pain fibers
ascend retrogradely with the descending sympathetic fibers
of the ovarian plexus and lumbar splanchnic nerves to cell
bodies in the T11-L1 spinal sensory ganglia. Visceral afferent reflex fibers follow parasympathetic fibers retrogradely
through the uterine (pelvic) and inferior hypogastric plexuses
and the pelvic splanchnic nerves to cell bodies in the S2-S4 spinal sensory ganglia.