Changes

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Clitoral hood

4 bytes added, 21:46, 17 September 2022
Development and variation: Wikify.
==Development and variation==
The clitoral hood is formed during the [[Fetus|fetal]] stage by the cellular lamella.<ref name="Cold and Taylor"/> The cellular lamella grows down on the [[dorsal side]] of the [[clitoris]] and is eventually fused with the [[clitoris]]. The clitoral hood is formed from the same tissues that form the [[foreskin ]] in human males.
The clitoral hood varies in the size, shape, thickness, and other aesthetic areas. Some women have large clitoral hoods that completely cover the [[clitoral glans]]. Some of these can be retracted to expose the [[clitoral glans]], such as for hygiene purposes or for pleasure; others do not retract. Other women have smaller hoods that do not cover the full length of the [[clitoral glans]], leaving the [[clitoral glans]] exposed all the time. Sticky bands of tissue called ''adhesions'' can form between the hood and the glans; these stick the hood onto the glans so the hood cannot be pulled back to expose the glans, and, as in the male, strongly scented [[smegma]] can accumulate.
16,983
edits

Navigation menu