A Japanese study confirms the origin of the liquid produced by squirting women, which was already different from that emitted during ejaculation.
When a woman reaches orgasmshe generally knows, like the man, an ejaculation. And if we know that there is a certain fringe of the female sex that is categorized under the name of “squirting women”, it turns out that they do not produce exactly the same content as during a more classic ejaculation. A 2011 study had shown that during ejaculation, a milky fluid was expelled in very small quantities, while a squirting woman produced a transparent fluid and this in a consistent way.
Female ejaculation: fluid comes from Skene’s glans
The origin of the milky fluid had since been known. This fluid actually comes from small glands, called Skene’s glands, located not far from the urethra. They are also given the name of “female prostate” because they contain specific prostate antigens (PSA) and which, in men, liquefy sperm.
Squirting women: a 2014 study with controversial results
Our colleagues from Sciences et Avenir echo a another revelation, more recent and having to do with the origin of the other fluid, that emitted by squirting women. A previous French study had established, in 2014, that this liquid came from the bladder. Fountain women had however shown their skepticism in the face of these observations, explaining that the smell and the color of their projections did not resemble their urine.
Confirmation by Japanese researchers
New work, this time led by japanese researchers and published in the International Journal of Urology, solicited five squirting women. A mixture of water and blue dye was injected into the bladder of each of these participants. After stimulation, the liquid ejected following the provoked pleasure was always blue. For Jessica Påfs, expert in sexology at the Swedish University of Gothenburg, “this test confirms that the liquid comes from the bladder”. But, she adds, “We cannot currently explain why this liquid, even if it comes out of the bladder, does not seem to have the same composition. Further work will be required.”