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Secreciones vaginales - causadas por la producción excesiva de semen inyectado

Most women do not feel a need to urinate during sex, but during an orgasm, females will experience some wetness or discharge because of ejaculation.

Dr. Ernst Grafenberg is the first physician to examine the female ejaculation pheromone in detail. According to his research, “large quantities of a clear transparent fluid are expelled not from the vulva, but out the urethra,” explaining that female ejaculation is a stress- induced urinary incontinence.

Excerpts from Dr. Ernst Grafenberg’s Publication

“At first I thought that the bladder sphincter had become defective by the intensity of the orgasm. Involuntary expulsion of urine is reported in sex literature. In the cases observed by us, the fluid was examined and it had no urinary character. I am inclined to believe that "urine" reported to be expelled during female orgasm is not urine, but only secretions of the intraurethral glands correlated with the erotogenic zone along the urethra in the anterior vaginal wall.” [1]

Dr. Grafenberg analyzed the ejaculate content and disputed the popular belief that female ejaculation is a bladder problem that resulted in a forceful expulsion of urine. Dr. Grafenberg’s analysis concluded the fluid was not urine that was discarded.

Skene’s gland, which is located in between the upper and lower walls of the urethral tract, acts similar to that of a male’s prostate gland. Long exposure of hormonal imbalance of Dopamine, Oxytocin, and Acetylcholine can increase the risk of Skene’s gland inflammation. An inflamed Skene’s gland, along with swelling of the erectile tissues surrounding the urethra, vagina, cervix, uterus, and clitoral corpus spongiosum, allows a huge volume of body and vaginal fluid to be stored and ejaculated during sexual arousal.

When Dopamine, Oxytonergic and Acetylcholine hormones are not in balance with the NOergic nervous system and when her G-spot is intensely stimulated, an over production of vaginal ejaculation fluid can cause a woman to feel a need to urinate, resulting in an uncomfortable gushing of urethral ejaculation.

REFERENCE
^Grafenberg E., "The role of the urethra in female orgasm". Int J Sexol 3: 145–8, 1950.

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