Tag Archives: Mammal female reproductive system

Whether You Really Need to Pee After Sex, According to Science

Photo: VGstockstudio (Shutterstock)

If you have a vagina, you’ve probably been told that it’s an absolute must to pee immediately after having sex to prevent urinary tract infections (UTIs). But it turns out there isn’t a lot of evidence to support this idea. There is shockingly little research on the question of whether this oft-repeated advice actually works. One study in a journal called Evidence Based Practice found that, overall, it doesn’t seem to make a difference. But that’s just one study, and the results didn’t point strongly in either direction.

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) does not include peeing after sex in its tips for preventing UTIs. Here’s what they do recommend:

  • Wash the skin around the anus and the genital area.
  • Drink plenty of fluids (including water) to flush bacteria out of your urinary system.
  • Empty your bladder as soon as you feel the urge or about every two to three hours.

They point out that factors like being pregnant, having diabetes, or going through menopause can increase your risk of contracting a UTI. And some people just seem to be more prone to them: If you’ve had UTIs before, your chances of getting one again are higher than somebody who has never had one.

That said, if you’ve been peeing after sex, there’s no need to quit that habit. While there’s no conclusive evidence that it helps, there’s also no conclusive evidence that it hurts—or even that it’s useless.

Does peeing after sex prevent pregnancy or STIs?

While we’re at it, I’d like to mention two myths that have gotten mixed up in the whole peeing-after-sex advice. Peeing after sex is not likely to prevent pregnancy, or to prevent sexually transmitted infections.

When it comes to preventing pregnancy, sperm go into the vagina, not the urethra. These two holes are close to each other, but they are not the same thing, and the pee that leaves your urethra has no influence on what’s going on in your vagina, cervix, or uterus. People who are trying to become pregnant may have heard the advice to delay urinating for at least a short time after having sex to let gravity assist their chances in conceiving—but the American Society for Reproductive Medicine notes that “this belief has no scientific foundation.”

Urinating after sex has not been found to have a significant effect on your risk of contracting HIV, chlamydia, herpes, or any other sexually transmitted infection. To prevent STIs, ACOG recommends using condoms, being aware of the increased risk of anal sex or other acts that can result in breaking the skin, and making sure to get vaccinated against HPV and hepatitis B, both of which can be transmitted sexually.

Read original article here

Dolphins Have a Fully Functional Clitoris, Study Finds

Photo: Joe Raedle/Newsmakers (Getty Images)

Humans and dolphins have even more in common than we might have thought, new research suggests. Biologists say they’ve found clear anatomical evidence that female dolphins have a fully functional clitoris that helps them experience pleasure during sex—just as it does for humans. The findings may one day help scientists trace back the evolutionary origins of the sexual organ and sex in general.

Lead author Patricia Brennan, an assistant professor of biological sciences at Mount Holyoke College in Massachusetts, and her team have been studying the evolution of genitals in all sorts of vertebrate animals. More recently, they turned their attention to dolphins, the marine mammals known for their playful and eerily human-like nature at times (in ways good and bad).

“Dolphins have vaginal folds, and we were studying these folds to try to figure out their function and why they are so diverse across species,” Brennan told Gizmodo in an email. “As we dissected all these vaginas, the clitoris was obviously very well developed, so we decided to investigate how much we knew about it.”

Brennan and her team were able to closely look at the clitoral tissue of 11 bottlenose dolphin females that had died of natural causes. Aside from studying the surface physical features of the clitoris, they also examined the presence of nerve endings, muscles, and blood vessels. Everything they found pointed to the same thing: a fully working funmaker.

For one, Brennan noted, the dolphin clitoris is relatively large and filled with plenty of erectile tissue and blood vessels that allow it to engorge quickly. Their clitoris also grows in size as a dolphin matures, much as it does with human puberty, and it’s surrounded by a band of connective tissue that helps it keep its shape, indicating that it’s a valuable body part. And perhaps most importantly, the dolphin clitoris is chock full of nerve endings right underneath relatively thin skin, along with other sensory receptors—both of which, Brennan says, “are likely involved in a pleasure response like they are in humans.”

It’s no secret that some species of dolphins seem to engage in sexual behaviors outside of the strict criteria and timing needed for reproduction (even with humans, according to some eyewitness accounts). It’s widely thought that these dolphins use sex as a social lubricant. During mating, they appear to engage in copious amounts of foreplay before the brief period of penetrative sex. Both male and female dolphins are thought to masturbate, and there have been reports of homosexual behaviors among both sexes, including female dolphins rubbing each others’ clitorises using their snouts or flippers. So it stands to reason that the clitoris would play a key role in all this fun-having. But the authors say theirs is the first anatomical research to clearly demonstrate this purpose.

Dolphins engaging in sexual behavior.
Photo: Dara Orbach

“While it may seem obvious that animals that engage in as much sexual behavior as dolphins do should be deriving pleasure from this behavior, we can now use morphological features of the clitoris to show that they actually do,” said Brennan. Though Brennan and her team have previously discussed this research, their peer-reviewed study has now been published in Current Biology.

Dolphins aren’t the only animal besides humans that appear to enjoy sex and to do it for non-reproductive reasons; many of our primate relatives seem to as well. But the fact that the dolphin clitoris is so similar to the human version, despite dolphins and humans probably being 95 million years apart in the evolutionary family tree, could suggest that the organ’s origins go way, way back. And given the risks that can come with sex, it makes sense that pleasure would evolve as a motivating factor.

Large nerves in a dolphin clitoris
Image: Patricia Brennan

Studying the sex lives of animals is no easy task. But Brennan and her colleagues point out that the nature of female sexuality and the clitoris has long been understudied in animals and in humans. Among other things, this lack of knowledge hampers our knowledge of how sex came to be in the first place.

“Sex is central to evolutionary processes, and our ignorance of female sexuality results in an incomplete understanding of how sex actually works in nature.” Brennan said. “You need two to tango, as the saying goes!”

Brennan’s team plans to keep studying the evolution of genitals in various animals. That list of projects will continue to include dolphins, but also snakes, alpacas, and even alligators.

Read original article here