What's the difference between pudenda and pudendal?

Pudenda


Definition:

  • (n. pl.) The external organs of generation.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Who would've predicted that instead of laughing at Victorian prudery, many men still expect their sexual encounters to entail pudenda, pins and pits as marble smooth as those of young Ruskin's imagination?
  • (2) The Receptaculum ductus deferentis, the Corpus vasculare paracloacalis and the Phallus nonprotrudens in the Cloaca were supplied from the thick Ramus cloacalis of the A. pudenda.
  • (3) To investigate the ejecting course of EGR-fluid, Evans blue solution and India ink were injected into the A. pudenda interna and just beneath the epithelium of the ejaculatory groove region, respectively, using cloacal specimens.
  • (4) Evans blue (T-1824) solution injected into the A. pudenda interna was easily exuded out directly from TVP.
  • (5) The A. pudenda accessoria is not formed on the left side of the pelvis.
  • (6) The vertebral venous system is anastomosis with the vena cava posterior, the common iliac vein, the internal iliac vein and vena pudenda interna.
  • (7) Arteriography gives a complete study of the pudenda arterial tree and its terminal ramifications, and it is able to supply all the necessary informations regarding the planning of revascularization procedures.
  • (8) For the selective study of the pudenda and peniena vascularization we perform a selective arteriography bilaterally, with the catheter tip placed in the proximal part of the internal iliac artery.
  • (9) This stem divides into the A. obturatoria dextra and the A. pudenda accessoria.
  • (10) The A. pudenda accessoria goes through the pelvis and through the fissure between Symphysis and the Diaphragma urogenitale on the Radix penis as the A. dorsalis penis dextra.
  • (11) They recall the fact that the preprostatic veins are attached at the bottom, not only to the venae dorsales penis, but also to the venae pudendae internae which runs under the levator ani muscle.
  • (12) Ligation of the A. pudenda interna decreased the volume of fluid to a negligible amount, and removal of the paracloacal vascular body (Corpus vasculare paracloacale) completely suppressed the tumescence of the copulatory organ and the flow of the fluid (lymph-like fluid).
  • (13) TVP was abundant in capillaries which were branched off from the A. pudenda interna at the site of paracloacal vascular body (PVB).
  • (14) Also, no ejection of the injected dye solution into the A. pudenda interna was found in the dorsal wall of the cloaca, particularly from the TF.
  • (15) The author Frank Harris reported a later conversation with Ruskin, in which the critic described the destroyed works of art as "painting after painting of Turner's of the most shameful sort - the pudenda of women - utterly inexcusable and to me inexplicable."
  • (16) In addition, a new flap, based on the arteria pudenda externa, was designed and implemented in 1 patient.
  • (17) The Rami ureterodeferentiales caudales originated from the A. caudae lateralis and A. pudenda.
  • (18) Development of the external genitalia in rat fetuses was studied with special reference to the formation of the labia pudenda and the determination of the stage at which the sex difference could be recognized from changes in the external structures.
  • (19) Lymph generated in the vascular body causes the erection of the penis only and a lymph generated the tissue of ejaculatory groove, region to which blood is supplied from the A. pudenda interna is ejected from the epithelium of this region through the intercellular space of it.
  • (20) In one case presenting with obstruction of the pudenda artery revascularization of the penis was achieved by anastomosis of the inferior epigastric artery to the deep dorsal vein of the penis.

Pudendal


Definition:

  • (a.) Of or pertaining to the pudenda, or pudendum.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) A new simplified technique for evaluating the internal pudendal artery and the penile vessels is described using a new catheter configuration with a very short 90 degrees-angled tip.
  • (2) The data presented in this paper confirm the need for stimulation of the pudendal reflex arch to achieve physiological conditions.
  • (3) Until now the mean value of the left and right pudendal latencies has been used as the index of pudendal neuropathy.
  • (4) Pelvic nerve: vagina, cervix, and perineal skin; hypogastric nerve: cervix and proximal three fifths of the uterus; pudendal nerve: skin of perineum, inner thigh, and clitoral sheath.
  • (5) The tests of motor function showed pelvic floor motor neuropathy in the patients with IFI, compared with controls, anal canal resting and voluntary contraction pressures were significantly (p less than 0.05, p less than 0.002) lower, pudendal nerve terminal motor latency and external anal sphincter fibre density were significantly (p less than 0.05, p less than 0.05) raised.
  • (6) The field potentials evoked by sensory pudendal nerve stimulation were located in medial parts of laminae V and VI, and lamina X in the S1 to S3 spinal segments.
  • (7) Digital angiography of pudendal and penile arteries was performed in 44 consecutive patients with erectile failure of suspected vascular origin.
  • (8) In two of these patients the pudendal nerve terminal motor latency could not be recorded after surgery.
  • (9) We sought to determine whether clonidine could influence, at a central level, somatic and viscerosomatic reflexes on the pudendal nerve independent of actions on the sympathetic nervous system.
  • (10) Somatosensory cortical evoked potential studies (SEPs) following stimulation of the pudendal nerves proved useful in objectively documenting preoperative low sacral root involvement in a 33-year-old postlaminectomy patient, presenting with impending cauda equina syndrome and treated by piriformis muscle release with good clinical results.
  • (11) When a reflex bladder contraction occurred in response to filling (expulsion phase) the intravesical pressure exceeded the urethral pressure and at the top of the vesical contraction a series of rapid intraluminal pressure high frequency oscillations (IPHFO) were recorded at the urethral recording site, which were abolished by neuromuscular blocking agents as well as after acute sectioning of pudendal nerves.
  • (12) Gross neuropathy of the distal part of the pudendal nerve does not account for the observed external anal sphincter weakness in geriatric patients or for their faecal incontinence.
  • (13) An alternative is electrostimulation: stimulation of the afferents of the pudendal nerve, via the pelvic floor (anal, vaginal), percutaneously (dorsal nerve of the penis, clitoric nerve) or by the implantation of electrodes results in inhibition of the detrusor.
  • (14) 24 men suffering from localized prostatic cancer undergoing radical retropubic nerve-sparing prostatectomy were investigated by the following electrophysiological methods: Bulbocavernosus reflexes elicited from the penile skin or the posterior urethra, sensory thresholds in the posterior urethra, cerebral evoked potentials after stimulation of the pudendal nerve or the posterior urethra.
  • (15) Under local anesthesia a penile arteriographic catheter is placed in the internal pudendal artery.
  • (16) In N group, HGN stimulation still elicited responses of the rhabdosphincter even after pudendal nerve was transected in advance, indicating that these evoked potentials were independent of somatic nerve inflow.
  • (17) Performance of standard arteriography leads to insufficient visualization of pudendal and penile vessels and risks false positive results.
  • (18) Concomitant labelling of pudendal and sciatic nerves with different fluorescent tracers revealed a small number of double-labelled cells in the dorsal root ganglia but only single-labelled cells in the retrodorsolateral nucleus.
  • (19) To assess this problem, 24 impotent diabetic subjects, 21 nonimpotent diabetic subjects, and 10 subjects with psychogenic impotence were compared with nocturnal monitoring of penile tumescence and rigidity, penile arterial blood flow, and nerve conduction of the pudendal nerve.
  • (20) After each patient's history and physical examination were taken, a series of tests were administered which included hepatic and renal function, blood sugar, cholesterol, triglyceride, testosterone, prolactin level, nocturnal penile tumescence (NPT), duplex sonography, cavernosography, and internal pudendal arteriography.

Words possibly related to "pudenda"

Words possibly related to "pudendal"