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Frenulum
,updated REFbook parameters
The frenulum and the associated tissue delta on the underside of the [[penis]] below the corona has been described in sexuality textbooks as "very reactive" and "particularly responsive to touch that is light and soft." The “underside of the shaft of the penis, meaning the body below the corona” is a “source of distinct pleasure.”<ref name="hass1993">{{REFbook
| last=Hass |first=K., |last2=Hass A. | firstfirst2=A. | year=1993 | title=Understanding Sexuality | url= | editor= | edition= | volume= | chapter= | pages=99–100 | location=St Louis | publisher=Mosby | isbn= | quote= | accessdate= | note=
}}</ref> Crooks and Baur observe that two extremely sensitive specific locations that many men find particularly responsive to stimulation are the corona, and the frenulum.<ref name="crooks1993">{{REFbook
| last=Crooks |first=R., |last2=Baur K. | firstfirst2=K. | year=1993 | title=Our Sexuality | url= | editor= | edition=5 | volume= | chapter= | pages=129 | location=Redwood City | publisher=Benjamin/Cummings | isbn=0534595677 | quote= | accessdate= | note=
}}</ref> Repeated stimulation of this structure will cause orgasm and ejaculation in some men. In men with spinal cord injury preventing sensations from reaching the brain, for example, the frenulum just below the glans can be stimulated to produce orgasm and peri-ejaculatory response.<ref>{{REFweb
| quote=