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→Keratin as "Protection"
== Keratin as "Protection" ==
It was hypothesized in the past that the layers of [[keratin]] resulting from [[circumcision]] provided a barrier of protection against [[Circumcision and Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STD's)| sexually transmitted diseases]]. In 1986, the late circumcision-advocate [[Aaron J. Fink]] invented the idea, without any evidence, that circumcision could prevent the transmission of [[HIV]], arguing that the hard and toughened glans of the [[circumcised ]] male resisted infection, while the soft and sensitive foreskin and glans [[mucosa]] of the [[intact ]] male were ports of entry.<ref>{{REFjournal
|last=Fink
|first=Aaron J.
}}</ref>
Recent studies have shown this hypothesis to be false. One study found that there is "no difference between the keratinization of the inner and outer aspects of the adult male foreskin," and that "keratin layers alone were unlikely to explain why [[intact ]] men were formerly believed to be at higher risk for [[HIV]] infection, however keratinization of the glans penis was not measured."<ref>{{REFjournal
|last=Dinh
|init=MH