Clitoroplasty

Clitoroplasty is the surgical creation of a clitoris in transgender women (as part of sex reassignment surgery), or restoration in the case of procedures reversing the damage caused by female genital cutting.

Women and girls with congenital adrenal hyperplasia may also undergo this to correct clitoral size in accordance to the female anatomy or complications of the condition.[1]

Clitoroplasty in sex reassignment surgery

As part of reassignment surgery for trans women, there are several ways to create a clitoris from existing tissue. The most common method in practice is to separate the penile glans from the paired erectile tissues, and reduce in size to simulate that of a cisgender woman's clitoris.

The success rate for the creation of a clitoris for trans women greatly varies. The most common cause of failure is the necrosis of the tissue from lack of blood supply. The greatest non-lethal health risk is damage to the pudendal nerves that greatly reduces the chances and intensity of orgasms when severed.

Most transsexual women's bodies readily accept the relocation of glans penile tissue in the area of a cissexual woman's clitoris. The glans tissue derived clitoris (using simple dissection techniques), is not a perfect emulation of the clitoris of a cissexual woman because of the difference in colour, shape and sexual response. Dr Suporn Watanyusakul uses a modified technique that preserves some erectile tissue to simulate clitoral engorgement and a small amount of foreskin to act as a clitoral hood.

An alternative technique involved the use of urethral spongiform as a clitoral mound. This allowed for better simulation of female sexual response at the cost of the clitoris being not as sensate as one derived from the glans penis. Urine leakage was a notable complication with this technique.[2]

Older genital reassignment techniques made no attempt at the creation of a clitoris at all. The glans of the penis was sutured in the most distal (inner) area of the neovagina to simulate a cervix. The late Stanley Biber preferred this method.

References

  1. Clitoroplasty in Intersex: a New Technique 1998 British Journal of Urology, 1981 original publication
  2. Fang, Rong-Hwang; Chen, Cheng-Feng; Ma, Shiuh "A New Method for Clitoroplasty in Male-to-Female Sex Reassignment Surgery", Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, April 1992, volume 89, issue 4

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, March 07, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.