Posted on 28th Jul 2020 / Published in: Hip
The puborectalis muscle is a U-shaped sling muscle which travels from the bodies of the pubic bones, past the urogenital hiatus, and then around the anal canal.
Straight muscle of the pubic area.
Some of the puborectalis muscles fibres form an additional U-shaped sling over the urethra in males and the urethra and vagina in females. This sling is essential in maintaining urinary continence, particularly during a sudden increase in intra-abdominal pressure for example, during sneezing.
Posterior surface of bodies of pubic bones.
None (forms 'puborectal sling' posterior to rectum).
Maintain faecal continence – during defecation this muscle relaxes.
It is primarily supplied by nerve to levator ani (S4). To a small degree the pudendal nerve (S2-S4) contributes to its innervation as well.
Inferior gluteal, inferior vesical and pudendal arteries.
Failure of the puborectalis muscle to relax in the absence of a neurologic disorder has been attributed as a major cause of chronic severe constipation, which does not respond to laxatives or fibre supplementation.
Chapter 37 - Neuromuscular Physiology of the Pelvic Floor, Arnold Wald, in Physiology of the Gastrointestinal Tract (Fifth Edition), 2012.
None specific to this muscle.
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