A Glossary of Terms Related to Circumcision
and the Genital Organs
- Adhesions
- During development in the womb the foreskin is not differentiated
from the glans penis until a late stage. At birth the foreskin
is thus usually still attached to the underlying glans by tissues
generally known as 'adhesions', but more correctly called synechia.
-
- These adhesions can be broken down by a doctor with a blunt
probe, as is necessary before infant circumcision, but are otherwise
best left to resolve themselves. There should be no adhesions
remaining by the time a boy reaches the age of 5, by which time
he should have been taught to retract his own foreskin daily
for washing and every time he urinates. Any adhesions still remaining
by the onset of puberty must be broken down to allow proper development
and hygiene of the penis.
- Balanitis
- Inflamation of the foreskin or the glans. The condition should
more properly be called balano-posthitis. Balanitis strictly
means inflammation of the glans and posthitis means that of the
prepuce. It may be caused by trauma, irritants or infection.
-
- Infective balanitis is commonly caused by bacteria or fungi
(yeasts) which thrive in the warm, moist, dark conditions under
the foreskin.
-
- Poor hygiene, retained soap or detergent, retained smegma,
retained urine or inadequate drying may cause an irritant balanitis.
-
- Frictional trauma and accidental wounds cause fissures, erosions
or localized area of damage. Postcoital erosion of the frenulum
is not uncommon.
- Ballooning
- A condition caused by phimosis in
which urine cannot escape from the tip of the foreskin as fast
as it is fed into it from the bladder. The foreskin thus swells
up with the pressure of the urine inside it and the infant usually
cries with the resultant pain. The backward pressure placed on
the bladder can cause damage to that organ and can also put additional
strain on the kidneys which can easily be permanently damaged.
- Balls
- A slang term for the testicles.
- Circumcision
- Minor surgery to remove the prepuce, or foreskin,
of the penis. The unqualified term is properly applied only in
relation to the male penis and foreskin, but can also apply to
removal of the analogous female tissue, ie the clitoral hood.
It is performed for religious reasons in some communities but
primarily for medical reasons such as improved hygiene and sexual
pleasure, and the elimination of problems of phimosis,
paraphimosis and balanitis.
-
- Circumcision may be performed at any age but is most often
done neonatally when it is quick, simple, cheap and almost painless.
-
- (A circumcised penis)
- Clitoral Hood
- A fibrous covering to the clitoris
which is the exact equivalent to the male foreskin,
having developed from the same initial tissue structure. Like
the male foreskin it can sometimes be too thick or long to retract
during sexual excitement and thus can prevent the stimulus to
the clitoris needed for orgasm. It can be trimmed or removed
by true female circumcision to enable
proper stimulation of the clitoris.
- Clitoris
- A small organ in the female genitals which is the exact equivalent
to the male penis, having developed from
the same initial tissue structure. Like the penis it is the primary
organ of sexual pleasure.
- Corona
- The flared rim at the back of the glans. This is the most
sensitive part of the penis. After circumcision it is normal
for the corona to expand to a diameter significantly greater
than that of the penile shaft. Circumcision allows full stimulation
of the corona during sexual activity.
- Coronal Sulcus
- The 'groove' behind the corona at the
back of the glans.
- Dorsal
- A medical term meaning 'on the upper surface'.
- -ectomy
- A word ending meaning 'removal of', eg appendectomy = removal
of the appendix.
- Female Circumcision
- Removal of the hood of the clitoris. This is directly analogous
to male circumcision and is performed when the clitoral hood
is too thick or long and inhibits stimulus of the clitoris during
intercourse. The term was incorrectly applied by some early anthropologists
to the complete removal of the female sexual parts, see FGM.
- FGM (Female Genital Mutilation)
- A procedure carried out in a few small areas of Africa and
the Middle East in which the female genitals are drastically
modified by removal of the whole clitoris together with the inner
and outer labia. It is often followed by infibulation, sewing
together of the cut surfaces. The sole purpose of this activity
is to prevent sexual pleasure in women. It has been incorrectly
called female circumcision by some early anthropologists and
this term is now eagerly used by the opponents of male circumcision
to confuse the issue and attempt to discredit circumcision by
analogy.
- Fold
- The end of the uncircumcised penis, where the outer skin
folds inward and forms the moist mucosal area.
- Foreskin (also called prepuce)
- Prepuce, the part of the skin system of the penis covering
the glans. The outer skin folds inward at the end of the foreskin.
From this fold on to where it joins behind the glans is the moist
mucosal area.
-
- The foreskin is a remnant of earlier stages of evolution
(much as the appendix is) where it was necessary to protect the
glans from abrasion from undergrowth and tree branches. Now that
man travels on 2 legs rather than 4 and is generally clothed
the foreskin serves no further purpose.
-
- The presence of a foreskin can lead to phimosis, paraphimosis,
balanitis, urethritis, retained smegma, a higher risk for penile
and cervical cancer, and a higher risk for sexually transmitted
diseases including AIDS.
- Frenulum (also called frenum or
fraenum)
- A fibrous cord of connecting tissue on the underside of the
penis which joins the back of the glans to the inner foreskin,
much like the frenum of the tongue. It is generally recommended
that it be removed during circumcision.
-
- (The frenulum)
- Frenulum Breve
- The condition in which the frenulum
is very short and tight.
-
- A frenulum breve prevents the normal complete retraction
of the foreskin and may distort the glans
during erection. It thus inhibits normal sexual activity. In
some cases it can lead to impotence as the sufferer suppresses
erections due to the pain they cause.
-
- A short frenulum can rip during sexual activity with painful
and very bloody consequences.
-
- (A frenulum breve)
- Glans
- The bulbous head of the penis. The primary
area of sexual sensitivity to touch.
-
- In the uncircumcised the glans is generally covered by foreskin
when the penis is flaccid although the amount of this covering
varies between men from 'complete with overhang' to 'none at
all'. During erection the foreskin should slide back to uncover
the glans to allow it to be fully stimulated but often the foreskin
is too tight or long and fails to fully retract. Circumcision
permanently bares the glans allowing full stimulation during
sex.
- Haemophiliac
- A male whose blood does not clot properly due to a genetic
defect. (Women can carry the defective gene, but do not show
the symptoms of haemophilia.)
Conventional surgery on a haemophiliac can result in considerable
loss of blood and is thus to be avoided as far as possible.
- High
- When used to describe the position of the circumcision scar
line, this is taken to mean closer to the base of the penis and
further from the glans.
- Hypospadias
- A condition in which the urethra opens
onto the under side of the shaft of the penis instead of at the
tip of the glans.
-
- A boy with hypospadias should not be circumcised until after
the hypospadias has been assessed by a urologist and any corrective
action taken. This is because tissue from the foreskin is normally
used in the repair. The urologist can complete the circumcision
at the end of the repair operation..
- -itis
- A word ending meaning 'inflammation of', eg appendicitis
= inflammation of the appendix.
- Knob
- A slang term for the glans penis.
- Low
- When used to describe the position of the circumcision scar
line, this is taken to mean closer to the glans and further from
the base of the penis.
- Meatus
- The opening of the urethra at the
end of the glans.
- MGM (Male Genital Mutilation)
- A derogatory term for circumcision devised by those opposed
to it in order to try to discredit it by analogy with the extreme
forms of female genital modification.
- Neonatal
- Soon after birth. Newborn.
- Paraphimosis
- A condition in which the foreskin, having been retracted
behind the glans (often with some difficulty) is too tight to
return to covering the glans. The trapped foreskin causes the
glans to swell more and a viscious circle sets in. It is imperative
that the swelling of the glans be reduced immediately and the
foreskin replaced otherwise surgical intervention will be necessary
to prevent loss of the glans.
-
- Once a paraphimosis has occured it is almost certain to recurr
and this should be prevented by circumcision as soon as the swellings
from the paraphimosis have resolved completely.
- Penile reduction surgery
- A derogatory term for circumcision devised by those opposed
to it in order to try to discredit it. Circumcision does not
reduce the penis itself in any way, but only removes the foreskin
covering the glans.
- Penis
- The male organ of sexual intercourse. It is also the organ
through which urine is passed.
- Phimosis
- A condition in which the foreskin
is too tight. If ballooning of the
foreskin occurs during urination at any age then a phimosis exists.
-
- The foreskin of an infant may be bonded to the glans by adhesions and thus inability to retract
the foreskin in boys under 5 years old is not in itself an indication
of phimosis. In the older child and teenager or adult, phimosis
is present if the foreskin cannot be freely, easily and painlessly
retracted to uncover the whole glans and coronal
sulcus both when flaccid and when erect.
-
- The only sure and reliable cure for phimosis is circumcision.
- -plasty
- A word ending meaning 'repair of', eg frenuloplasty = repair
of a torn frenulum.
- -pexy
- A word ending meaning 'fastening of', eg orchidopexy = fastening
an errant testicle into the scrotum.
- Prepuce
- see Foreskin
- Restoration
- Restoring the coverage of the glans through either surgical
or non-surgical means. The restoration process is long and complicated
and the restored 'foreskin' has few of the attributes of the
original except that it very loosely covers the glans to a greater
or lesser extent.
-
- A very small number of circumcised men blame their lack of
self-esteem on their circumcision and believe that if they can
only get back their foreskin all will be well with them, they
thus 'restore' their foreskin by stretching it longitudinally
over a considerable period of time. Because their disorder is
psychological rather than physical the presence of a semblance
of a foreskin again satisfies their desires and they claim increased
sexual pleasure.
- Scar Line
- The line where the mucosal skin remaining from the inner
layer of the foreskin meets the outer skin on the shaft of the
penis following circumcision. This may be anywhere from immediately
behind the corona of the glans to several centimetres back along
the shaft. The actual surgical scar is usually hard to see but
its location is often marked by a distinct colour change between
the shaft skin and the former inner lining of the foreskin.
- Scrotum
- The pouch behind the penis which houses
the testicles. The scrotum lengthens
and contracts with changes of temperature so as to keep the testicles
at as constant a temperature as possible.
- Skin Bridge
- An occasional complication of circumcision in which part
of the remaining skin heals by attaching to the glans, forming
a 'bridge' of skin. A skin bridge is the result of an incomplete
circumcision in which too little foreskin has been removed and
failure to use a non-stick ointment (like Vaseline) during the
early stages of healing.
-
- Skin bridges should be treated as soon as possible after
the main circumcision has completely healed by cutting through
them under topical or local anaesthetic.
- Smegma
- A white cheese like substance which collects in the coronal
sulcus and under the foreskin of the uncircumcised. It is composed
of excess lubricant from the Tyson's
Glands, sweat, stale urine, dead skin cells and collected
debris.
-
- If not cleaned away at least daily, smegma can become a breeding
ground for bacteria which turn it yellow and cause it to smell
significantly. The bacteria can cause balanitis as well as contributing
to other more serious diseases of the penis. Smegma has been
implicated in genital cancers.
- Stitch Tunnel (Suture Tunnel)
- An occasional complication of circumcision
in which 'tunnels' remain in skin from where sutures
were. They are normally caused when the skin around a suture
heals very quickly without the suture having first dissolved.
The pockets formed by the two layers of skin tend to collect
dirt and can be susceptible to infection. The skin on the outside
of the tunnel can easily be cut off under topical or local anaesthetic
so as to remove the blemish.
- Stretching
- The practice of the non-surgical restoration
of the foreskin through longitudinal stretching over a considerable
period of time.
- Surgical Knot
- A surgical knot is a double knot made with suture
material such that it will not slip or come untied.
- Suture
- A surgical stitch.
Suture material is designed to be very strong whilst being tolerated
well by the body. There are two types of suture material: a self
dissolving one which allows the stitch to come out in about a
week; and a non absorbable type, which has to be removed by the
doctor, that is used where the stitch needs to hold for longer
periods.
- Testicles (Testes)
- The soft egg shaped organs, consisting primarily of tightly
coiled tubes, lying in the scrotum in
which sperm are generated and which also produce male hormones.
- Tyson's Glands
- These are secretory glands which are symmetrically located
on either side of the frenulum. They produce an oily lubricant
for the foreskin.
- Uncircumcised
- The original state of the penis before
circumcision . Also sometimes called
uncut or intact.
-
- A few boys every year are born without any foreskin or with
a very short foreskin that doesn't cover any of the glans and
thus although uncircumcised have the appearance and all the benefits
of being circumcised.
-
- (An uncircumcised penis).
- Urethra
- The tube in the ventral portion of
the penis through which urine and semen
pass.
- Ventral
- A medical term meaning 'on the lower surface'.
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Updated November 2000
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