Clinical anatomy is not a descriptive subject only; it is a safety discipline that connects pelvic organs, blood vessels, nerves and surgical planes to avoidable maternal and gynecologic harm. Objective: This article analyzes the anatomy, function, uterine blood supply, innervation and pelvic-floor relations of female reproductive organs from the perspective of clinical decision-making. Methods: A narrative analytical review was performed using current international reports, clinical guidelines and high-quality reviews. Results: The uterus receives a dominant arterial supply from the uterine artery with ovarian and vaginal collateral pathways; venous and lymphatic drainage explain routes of hemorrhage, infection and malignant spread. Pelvic autonomic innervation explains visceral pain patterns and bladder, bowel and sexual-function consequences of surgical trauma. Discussion: Anatomy-based checklists can improve antenatal assessment, operative planning and early recognition of complications. Conclusion: For medical students, anatomy should be taught as an applied map for safe examination, childbirth care and gynecologic intervention rather than as isolated memorization
Nazarov et al. (Sat,) studied this question.