The cord extending from the abdomen to the testis and comprising the vas deferens, testicular artery, and nerves.
A cord running from the testis to the abdomen carrying the vas deferens, the blood vessels, nerves and lymphatics of the testis.
Cord containing arteries, veins, nerves, and lymphatics and extending from the lower abdomen to the testis.
Male germ cell that becomes a mature spermatozoon in the last stage of sperm formation.
The cord, consisting of the vas deferens, nerves, and blood vessels, that runs from the abdominal cavity to the testicle in the scrotum. The inguinal canal, through which the spermatic cord passes, becomes closed after the testes have descended.
This comprises the vas deferens, nerves and blood vessels, and it runs from the cavity of the abdomen to the testicle in the scrotum.
The cord by which the testis is connected to the abdominal inguinal ring. It surrounds the ductus deferens, blood vessels, lymphatics, and nerves supplying the testis and epididymis. These are enclosed in the cremasteric fascia, which forms an investing sheath.
A cylindrical anatomical structure that stretches from the testicle to the area near the groin. It encompasses blood vessels, nerves, and a duct responsible for transporting seminal fluid.
In males, the anatomical feature extending from the abdomen to the scrotum, housing the vas deferens—a tube responsible for transporting sperm—is referred to as the structure.
The conduit enclosed by its multiple layers of membranes, blood vessels, and nerves that transports semen from the testicles.