Pelvic Vasculature - Pelvic Powerhouse
- Internal Iliac Artery (IIA): Primary arterial supply to pelvis; bifurcates into anterior & posterior divisions.
- Posterior Division: Supplies pelvic wall & gluteal region.
- Key: Superior gluteal a. (largest branch).
- Anterior Division: Supplies pelvic viscera, perineum, medial thigh, gluteal region.
- Key: Internal pudendal a. (perineum), Uterine a. (uterus), Obturator a. (adductors).
⭐ Uterine artery crosses superior to the ureter ("water under the bridge") approx. 2 cm lateral to the cervix. Critical landmark in hysterectomy.
- Ovarian Artery: Arises from abdominal aorta, supplies ovaries.
- Median Sacral Artery: Arises from posterior aorta, supplies sacrum/coccyx.
Pelvic Vasculature - Life Givers
- Internal Iliac Artery (IIA): Chief pelvic artery.
- Posterior Division (Parietal):
- Iliolumbar A.
- Lateral Sacral A.
- Superior Gluteal A. (Largest IIA branch)
- 📌 Mnemonic: PILS (Posterior: Iliolumbar, Lateral sacral, Superior gluteal)
- Anterior Division (Visceral & Parietal):
- Visceral Branches:
- Umbilical A. → Superior Vesical A. (→ A. to Ductus Deferens)
- Inferior Vesical A. (♂) / Vaginal A. (♀)
- Middle Rectal A.
- Uterine A. (♀) - crosses superior to ureter ("water under the bridge")
- Internal Pudendal A. (main perineal artery)
- Parietal Branches:
- Obturator A.
- Inferior Gluteal A.
- Visceral Branches:
- Posterior Division (Parietal):

⭐ The Uterine Artery, from anterior division of IIA, passes superior to the ureter ("water under the bridge") - a key surgical landmark.
Pelvic Vasculature - Back & Beyond
- Internal Iliac Artery (IIA) - Posterior Division (Parietal Branches):
- Iliolumbar a.: Supplies iliacus, psoas major, quadratus lumborum.
- Lateral Sacral aa. (Superior & Inferior): Supply sacral canal structures, piriformis.
- Superior Gluteal a.: Largest IIA branch; exits greater sciatic foramen (GSF) above piriformis. Supplies gluteal muscles.
- IIA - Anterior Division (Selected Parietal Branches):
- Obturator a.: Exits via obturator canal. Supplies adductor muscles.
- Inferior Gluteal a.: Exits GSF below piriformis. Supplies gluteal muscles, hamstrings.
- Other Key Arteries:
- Median Sacral a.: Unpaired; from abdominal aorta bifurcation. Supplies sacrum, coccyx.
- Gonadal aa. (Ovarian/Testicular): From abdominal aorta; supply gonads.

⭐ An aberrant obturator artery (variant origin, often from inferior epigastric a.) is found in approximately 20-30% of individuals. Its course over the superior pubic ramus creates the "corona mortis" (crown of death), a crucial surgical landmark due to high bleeding risk if injured, especially during hernia repair or pelvic fracture fixation.
Pelvic Vasculature - Drain & Defend
-
Venous Drainage:
- Internal Iliac Vein (IIV): Drains pelvic viscera, walls, perineum, gluteal. Mirrors IIA branches.
- Gonadal Veins: Right → IVC; Left → Left Renal Vein.
- Median Sacral Vein: Drains to Left Common Iliac Vein or IVC.
- 📌 Batson's Plexus: Valveless vertebral veins. Metastasis route (e.g., prostate Ca to spine).
-
Lymphatic Drainage: Generally follows arterial supply.
- Key Nodal Groups:
- Internal Iliac Nodes: Most pelvic viscera, deep perineum.
- External Iliac Nodes: Upper bladder/cervix/vagina, lower limb.
- Common Iliac Nodes: From internal/external iliac.
- Para-aortic Nodes: Gonads, uterus, tubes; from common iliac.
- Superficial Inguinal Nodes: Perineum, lower vagina, anal canal (distal to pectinate).
- Key Nodal Groups:
⭐ Cloquet's node (Rosenmüller's node) is the highest deep inguinal node, sentinel for penile/clitoral Ca.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Internal iliac artery (IIA): main pelvic artery, with anterior & posterior divisions.
- IIA Posterior division: Iliolumbar, Lateral sacral, Superior gluteal (parietal).
- IIA Anterior division: supplies viscera (e.g., Uterine, Vesical) & perineum (Internal pudendal).
- Uterine artery crosses ureter superiorly ("water under the bridge") - critical surgical landmark.
- Internal pudendal artery: main perineal supply, via greater & lesser sciatic foramina.
- Ovarian (aortic branch) & Median sacral arteries contribute; pelvic veins drain to internal iliac vein.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app
