Anatomy of the urinary tract
      Urine is produced and excreted by the  kidneys, two bean-shaped retroperitoneal organs. In the cortical part of the  kidney the blood is filtered in the glomeruli. The filtrate passes through the  proximal convoluted tubule, the Loop of Henle and the distal convoluted tubule.  In these sections of the nephron the filtrate changes its chemical composition  and becomes concentrated urine. Finally, the urine passes through the straight  collecting tubule to the renal pelvis, into the ureters and thence into the  urinary bladder; here it is stored until voided via the urethra, which, in  males, traverses the prostate gland.
      Histology of urothelium
      The mucosa of the urinary tract is made by  a multilayered epithelium with an average of 7-8 layers of specialized cells  connected to a basement membrane.
        The thickness of bladder mucosa varies  depending on the state of the bladder. When distended, there are only few  layers of urothelial cells, while an empty bladder appears to have a thick multi-layered  epithelium. The cells of the deeper layers are small with a single nucleus. The  superficial cells are larger and often multinucleate with between 2 and 55  nuclei. Each superficial cell overlies two or more deeper cells. For this  reason they are called ‘umbrella’ cells.
        The urothelium of normal bladder can show  several epithelial invaginations called von Brunn’s nests. They can be lined by  mucus secreting columnar cells rather than urothelium. When they become  distended with mucus the histological picture is called cystitis cystica or  cystitis glandularis.