Bottom line: every woman is different. In , Viennese researcher Dr Florian Wimpissinger his real name affirmed this, additionally finding that the ejaculate from two women he studied was chemically different from that of urine. In particular, it contained more prostatic acid phosphatase PAP , more prostate-specific antigen PSA , and also some glucose. Twofold answer. This may consist of a small amount of milky white fluid, which, technically, is female ejaculate. To investigate the nature and origins of the fluid, French gynecologist Samuel Salama and his colleagues studied 7 women who report producing large amounts of fluid at orgasm. After confirming that their bladders were completely empty via ultrasound, the women masturbated alone or with a partner until they were close to climaxing, which took minutes.

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Jessica Shepherd wants to ensure you have the answers you need to feel at ease. A: Just like when men ejaculate, women can too. But, women obviously can do so. When we have a climax, we do ejaculate.
Squirting does not come out of the vagina
It can happen when a female becomes sexually aroused, but there is not necessarily an association with having an orgasm. Scientists do not fully understand female ejaculation, and there is limited research on how it works and its purpose. Female ejaculation is perfectly normal, although researchers remain divided on how many people experience it. In this article, we look at the current thinking on the mechanisms, purpose, and frequency of female ejaculation. The urethra is the duct that carries urine from the bladder to the outside of the body.
For a start, is it really gism shooting out of your vagina, or are you just peeing all over the place? Does it feel nice? And OMG can women get themselves pregnant with their own lady-semen and will this eliminate the male race!? But perhaps most importantly of all, just how do you get a ticket to the wettest party in town and teach yourself to squirt? But word on the street is if you have a vagina instead, you can also ejaculate similarly gloopy fluids from your urethra too. Say what? We put the question to our favourite health expert Dr Roger Henderson and he came up with a suitably formal response.