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From the * Microsurgical Potency Reconstruction
and Research Center, Taiwan Adventist Hospital, Taipei Medical University, and
the Geng-Long Hsu Foundation for Microsurgical Potency Research (USA); the
Department of Pathology and the
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, College
of Medicine; and the
Graduate Institute of
Veterinary Medicine, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of
China.
| Correspondence to: Dr Geng-Long Hsu, Microsurgical Potency Reconstruction and Research Center, Taiwan Adventist Hospital, 424 Pa-Te Rd, Sec 2, Taipei 105, Taiwan, Republic of China. |
| Received for publication September 16, 2004; accepted for publication May 1, 2005. |
| Abstract |
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Key words: Baculum, glans penis, dog, rat, human being
A different pistonlike stroking motion is characteristic of the human glans penis, which must also be strong enough to endure both the buckling and the pulling forces during coitus. If the traditional anatomic description of a sinusoid-only human glans penis is correct (Rogers and Jacob, 1992; Bannister and Dyson, 1995; Snell, 2004), a feeble glanular action can be expected. Similarly, an obstacle to ejaculation will ensue if there is not a strong supporting structure within the entire glans penis.
In 1985, an impotent patient asked me whether the bony ridge that he palpated inside his glans penis near the urethral tip was an abnormal growth. This patient had long ascribed his intractable impotence to this structure, which had not been identified in the literature. This question remained un-answered until recently, when it was reported to be a normal structure termed the distal ligament (Hsu et al, 1992, 2001). To find a further anatomic explanation for the strength of the glans penis, we analyzed the supporting structures of the glans penis and compared the microarchitectures of the corpora cavernosa in different species.
| Materials and Methods |
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| Results |
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The anatomic structure of the glans penis varies among different species. In the glans penis of both rats (Figure 1D) and dogs (Figure 1E), there is a bony structure (ie, the os penis). In these mammals, the os penis is the only supporting structure in the glans penis; there is no synovial joint in the species. In contrast to these os penises, the human glans penis contains an equivalent-ligamentous structure termed the distal ligament (Figure 1F). This is formed through an aggregation of the outer longitudinal layer of the tunica albuginea, in which neither a vascular component nor nerve tissue is observed. Moreover, many tributaries of supporting structures radiate directly from the distal ligament in human beings.
In histologic sections, the os penis (Figure 2A and B) is composed of mainly type I collagens, with type III collagens interlocking these type I collagens and connecting the os penis with its fibrous envelope. In humans, the distal ligament (Figure 2C) is composed of type I collagens, and neither osteocytes nor chondrocytes, characteristics of the bony structure, are found. Moreover, in the tunica albuginea of the corpora cavernosa, elastic fibers are sparse in the canine penis, few in the murine penis, and abundant in the human penis.
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| Discussion |
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In dogs, the overwhelmingly abundant ICPs and a complete septum enhance the strength of the corpora cavernosa. In rats, the mounting is so short that these enhancing microarchitectures are not necessary. The resulting lack of rigidity may, in turn, facilitate the flipping movement of the intromitted penis for removal of the semen plug, which is deposited by a previously mating male (Wallach and Hart, 1983). In human beings, the corpora cavernosa are intromitted. The ICPs and the septum may increase distensibility and may, therefore, be mandatory to establish sufficient rigidity by congestion of the sinusoids (Hsu et al, 2004) if longer coital time is required. The presence of a medium septum may be meaningful to both sexual behavior and associated clinical implications. A complete septum meets the requirement for establishing a pair of sufficiently strong corpora to buttress a long os penis such as that found in dogs, while in the rat, whose mounting time is as short as a few seconds, the absence of this structure will be sufficient to support a short os penis. In human beings, a medium septum with its unique dorsal fenestration is observed, and the principles of Pascal's fluid dynamics suggest that the paired corpora cavernosa can be regarded as a single milieu. It appears to be reinforced with ICPs. A sufficient erectile rigidity, otherwise, could not be obtained. Not surprisingly, therefore, a single donor artery is sufficient in an attempt at arterial reconstruction. The abundance of elastic components in the tunica albuginea of the corpora cavernosa thus increases the erectile capability of the penis. Overall, this implies that these structures play an important part in not only the increment of erectile length, but also the erectile girth of the human penis. Although we were not able to study whether the septum is a determinant to coital time, they may be somewhat related.
The os penis is not indispensable in every mammalian species (Williams-Ashman and Reddi, 1991). It is commonly believed the os penis is absent in human beings, and only the glanular sinusoids have been described. We found, however, the distal ligament of human beings, in spite of its paucity of chondrocytes and osteocytes, is an equivalent-ligamentous structure similar to the os penis.
Otherwise, an obstacle to ejaculation will ensue if there is no such strong supporting structure within the glans penis. Unlike fracture, because of its anatomically well-guarded position, natural disruptions of the human penis (intentional maneuvers excepted) (Hsu et al, 2001) have rarely been reported. Therefore, the traditional classification of the mammalian penis, according to the presence or absence of the os penis, may not be entirely correct. A fixed os penis in the human male would cause much awkward inconvenience in carrying out daily activities. The equivalent-ligamentous structure, termed the distal ligament, is optimal for concealment without sacrifice of tissue strength. A strong ligament within the glans penis associated with intromittent corpora cavernosa covered by abundant elastic fibers in the tunica should thus be an optimal anatomic solution for human mating behavior. It is not unusual for an impotent male to present to our clinician with the chief complaint of an insufficiently rigid glans penis. This subject may deserve further scientific study.
Not surprisingly, both the ligamentous structure and the os penis, composed of type I collagens in the central core, are interlinked through type III collagens, since the distal ligament is a structure contiguous with the outer longitudinal layer of the tunica albuginea (Hsu et al, 1992, 2004). Thus, the histologic nature of the tunica albuginea is similar to that of a bony structure. When the tunica is injured, the time for healing may take as long as that for a bony structure (Wood, 2003). In clinical observations of our patients, a tunica subjected to surgical trauma may take up to 1 year before it becomes no longer palpable. It may take a longer time for penile tissue to stabilize once it undergoes surgery (Hsu et al, 1997). Further scientific research is warranted to clarify this overlooked problem.
In conclusion, in dogs and rats, the strong os penis is designed for ready intromission and is associated with a pair of well-developed nonelastic corpora that act as a buttress for the os penis and are necessary for rigorous coitus in dogs. The less compliant corpus cavernosum of a rat's os penis may be suitable for its flipping mating action. These specific anatomic designs may provide explanations for individual requirements for the physiologic functions that vary from species to species. Although there is no os in human glans, a strong equivalent distal ligament is arranged centrally, is indispensable, and acts as a supporting trunk for the glans penis. Without this important structure, the glans could be too weak to bear the buckling pressure generated during coitus and too limber to serve as a patent passage for ejaculation, and it could be too difficult to transmit the intracavernosal pressure surge along the entire penis during ejaculation. Given the common histologic nature of the distal ligament, which is associated with the tunica albuginea and serves a similar function as the os penis observed in the dog and rat, one may ask whether the healing process of a tunica may take as long as that required in a bony structure. Further research is required to answer this question.
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