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The Clitoris—An Appraisal of its Reproductive Function During the Fertile Years

13 January 2020
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Publication Date
05 November 2019

Original Abstract
Stimulating the clitoris activates the brain to instigate changes in the female genital tract, namely, the enhancement of vaginal blood flow that increases vaginal luminal pO2, vaginal transudate (lubrication) facilitating painless penile penetration and partial neutralization of the basal luminal acidic pH, vaginal tenting, and ballooning delaying sperm transport and allowing semen de‐coagulation and capacitation (sperm activation) factors to act until arousal ends (often by orgasm induction). All these genital changes taken together are of major importance in facilitating the possibility of reproductive success (and thus gene propagation) no matter how or when the clitoris is stimulated—they reveal its overlooked reproductive function. Of course, also commensurate with these changes, is its activation of sexual pleasure. The clitoris thus has both procreative (reproductive) and recreative (pleasure) functions of equal importance. Clitoridectomy creates not only sexual disability but also a reproductive disability.

Reference
Levin, R.J. (2019). The Clitoris—An Appraisal of its Reproductive Function During the Fertile Years: Why Was It, and Still Is, Overlooked in Accounts of Female Sexual Arousal. Clinical Anatomy. DOI: 10.1002/ca.23498.

Request the entire article from the author
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ca.23498

clitoris, sexual arousal, reproduction function, vaginal tenting, increased vaginal blood flow, vaginal lubrication, capacitation, evolution, reproductive fitness

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