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A frenum piercing is a type of body piercing located on the underside of the shaft of the penis. [1] A series of parallel frenum piercings is known as a frenum ladder . A frenum ladder may be extended to include lorum piercings, hafada piercings and guiche piercings .
[1] [2] In adults, the frenulum is typically supple enough to allow manual movement of the foreskin over the glans and help retract the foreskin during erection. [3] [4] In flaccid state, it tightens to narrow the foreskin opening. [2] The penile frenulum is homologous to the clitoral frenulum in the female. [5]
Another reason for the treatment is to correct a rare complication of a frenulum breve which presents as scars on the frenulum, these scars cause pain and make normal sex very difficult and are caused by the rubbing of the frenulum whilst engaging in sexual activity. These scars only affect those with frenulum breve.
Before (above) and after (below) frenuloplasty. Frenulum breve, short frenulum, or the Josh Kelleher phenomenon is a condition in which the frenulum of the penis, which is an elastic band of tissue under the glans penis that connects to the foreskin and helps contract it over the glans, is too short and thus restricts the movement of the foreskin.
Gilt marginalia on the Boxer Codex (c. 1590) with the only known illustration of the pre-colonial Visayan tugbuk and sakra genital piercing from the Philippines. The traditional prehistoric and historic practice of genital piercing is most culturally widespread in Southeast Asia (particularly in Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, Malaysia, and Myanmar), where the insertion of various kinds ...
It's a systematic review in a quality journal, I see no convincing evidence that it is in any way fringe. MrOllie ( talk ) 22:01, 10 January 2023 (UTC) [ reply ] Hi @ MrOllie , what I considered fringe is the notion that the frenulum may not be involved in sexual sensation, which is a view that is not very widespread in literature.
Many labial and lingual frenum (tongue- and lip-ties) were snipped by a midwife, family doctor or dental surgeon. [1] The overall awareness and treatment of tongue- and lip-ties especially in breastfeeding infants has increased over recent years. [2] Frenectomies are routinely performed on infants to improve breastfeeding outcomes. [3]
Immediate medical treatment is given to survivors to treat injuries, collect evidence, and prevent sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and pregnancy. [1] Additionally, psychological treatment methods are applied to individuals who have mental illnesses as well as those suffering from emotional aftermath resulting from traumatic events. [ 2 ]