Difference between revisions of "Penis"
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Revision as of 19:12, 29 March 2015
The following content is part of the Circumpendium.
Anatomy and development of the male genital organ
Up to the ninth week of pregnancy, both male and female genital organs develop identically. Genital tubercle, labioscrotal swelling, genital fold and urogenital membrane have developed.
Only after that do the different external features emerge. Between the 11th and 17th week the genital tubercle becomes the clitoris in females, and the glans in males.
In girls, the genital fold remains open, in boys it grows together. It transforms into the inner labia and the clitoral hood in girls, and into the foreskin in boys. The labioscrotal swelling becomes the outer labia and scrotum respectively.
The growing together of the folds results in the seam that runs from the underside of the scrotum and the penile shaft up to the tip of the foreskin. The penis now consists of the shaft containing the erectile tissue, with the glans at the top. The shaft is surrounded by the shaft skin which, however, is not knitted to it. This mobility, combined with the stretching capabilities of the skin, allows for the growth in dimension of the penis during an erection. During an erection the erectile tissue fills with blood, giving the penis its stiffness and size.
In the area of the glans the shaft skin transitions into the outer layer of the foreskin, which extends past the tip of the glans. Parallel to that runs the inner layer of the foreskin. It is attached behind the rim of the glans, and runs between the glans and the outer foreskin layer, also past the tip of the glans. At the tip, the inner and outer foreskin layers are joined together.
This junction makes up the so-called ridged band. At the underside of the penis, in the area of the seam, the inner foreskin layer is connected to the glans by the frenulum.
Like the shaft skin, the foreskin layers are neither fused to the penis, nor to each other, but are moveable against each other. This enables the foreskin to be retracted all the way past the glans.
At the point of birth, the development of the external male genital organs is not completely finished. At this stage, the foreskin and glans share an epithelium (mucous layer, the balanopreputial membrane) that fuses the two together. It serves to protect the glans during infancy, and dissolves as the child develops.
Only then the foreskin can be retracted. The age at which this occurs is subject to the child's individual development. If the foreskin is retracted prematurely, before it has fully separated, that can result in painful tears and infections.
The widening of the foreskin also depends on age. A child's foreskin may be too tight to be retracted all the way past the glans, even though it has already completely separated from the glans. This early foreskin tightness (phimosis) is a normal stage of development and vanishes with increasing age in most boys.
A study by the Danish paediatrician and school doctor, Jakob Øster, of 9,545 examinations of pupils, published in 1968, led to the following results[1]:
Age | Phimosis | Tightness | Incomplete separation | Not retractable | Fully retractable |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 to 7 | 8% | 1% | 63% | 77% | 23% |
8 to 9 | 6% | 2% | 58% | 66% | 34% |
10 to 11 | 6% | 2% | 48% | 56% | 44% |
12 to 13 | 3% | 3% | 34% | 40% | 60% |
14 to 15 | 1% | 1% | 13% | 15% | 85% |
16 to 17 | 1% | 1% | 3% | 5% | 95% |
Classification according to Øster:
Phimosis: Foreskin tightness prohibiting retraction
Tightness: Foreskin tightness hampering retraction
References
- ↑ Øster J. Further fate of the foreskin: incidence of preputial adhesions, phimosis, and smegma among Danish Schoolboys. Arch Dis Child 1968;43:200-3.