In human anatomy, the ureters are muscular tubes that propel urine from the kidneys to the urinary bladder. In the adult, the ureters are usually 25–30 cm (10–12 in)
long and ~3-4 mm in diameter. In humans, the ureters arise from the renal pelvis on the medial aspect of each kidney before descending towards the bladder on
the front of the psoas major muscle. The ureters cross the pelvic brim near the bifurcation of the iliac arteries (which they
cross anteriorly). This is a common site for
the impaction of kidney stones (the others being the ureterovesical valve, where the
ureter meets the bladder, and the
pelviureteric junction, where the renal
pelvis meets the ureter in the renal hilum).
The ureters run posteroinferiorly on the
lateral walls of the pelvis and then curve anteriormedially to enter the bladder
through the back, at the vesicoureteric
junction, running within the wall of the
bladder for a few centimetres. The
backflow of urine is prevented by valves
known as ureterovesical valves. In females, the ureters pass through the mesometrium and under the uterine arteries on the way to the urinary bladder. Ureters are also found in all other amniote species, although different ducts fulfill the same role in amphibians and fish.[1] Disorders Cancer of the ureters is known as ureteral cancer. Clinical The ureter is sometimes injured in hysterectomies near the infundibulopelvic (suspensory) ligament or where the ureter courses posterior to the uterine vessels.
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