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The existence of urethral and paraurethral tissue that is functional and not an atrophied gland seems clearly proven. We are also completely sure of the existence of women that, during the orgasm, expulse a certain amount of fluid (we have collected up to 16 ml.). Nevertheless, the authors that have investigated this issue, called the "female ejaculation", seem to agree that only a certain and limited number of women do actually "ejaculate". If all women have a "female prostate", our hypothesis is that most women ejaculate, although they are variations in the quantity of the emitted liquid and/or the direction of the emission. We think it is quite possible that women that do not have perception of ejaculating during the orgasm, is because the product of their "female prostate" is very scarce or it takes the retrograde direction towards the bladder, as occurs in the retrograde ejaculation of certain men. Our experimental hypothesis, presupposes that if prostate specific antigen (a specific component of masculine prostate, present in seminal liquid) appears in postorgasmic urine the following suppositions would be confirmed: The urine emitted after the orgasm carries the product of the "female prostate" on its way trough the urethra. The postorgasmic urine has diluted PSA produced in the "female prostate" that could have fallen into the bladder because of incompetence of the sphincter in the moment of the orgasm (theoretically, it should be closed) or because the vesical sphincter relaxes with the orgasmic contractions and the gravity force pushes the fluid in the women in supine position (this occurred to us as a consequence of observing that those women that ejaculate outwards, that is, that emit fluid in the moment of the orgasm, comment that this emission has much more quantity when they are standing, favoring the effect of gravity). Resuming our position, we believe that all women ejaculate, that is, produce more or less quantity of secretion of the urethral and paraurethral glands and Skene's ducts and expels it outwards, or inwards towards the bladder, with the orgasmic contractions. With he confirmation of our hypothesis we intend to confirm the previous works about female ejaculation, calm those women that fear that they are urinating while experiencing orgasm and, finally, break the growing myth of the "ejaculating superfemale". Reprinted by permission of Dr. F. Cabello Santamarķa and the Scientific Committee of the 13th World Congress of Sexology.
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