Preputial gland

Preputial glands are exocrine glands that are located in the folds of skin front of the genitals of some mammals (including mice,[1] gray wolves[2] and even-toed ungulates[3]) and produce pheromones. The preputial glands of female animals are sometimes called clitoral glands.

The preputial glands of male musk deer produce strong-smelling deer musk which is of economic importance, as it is used in perfumes.[4]

Human homologues

Preputial gland
Details
Identifiers
Latin glandulae preputiales
TA A09.4.01.028
FMA 71652

Anatomical terminology

There is debate about whether humans have functional homologues to preputial glands. Preputial glands were first noted by Edward Tyson[5] and in 1694 fully described by William Cowper who named them Tyson's glands after Tyson.[6][7] They are described as modified sebaceous glands located around the corona and inner surface of the prepuce of the human penis. They are believed to be most frequently found in the balanopreputial sulcus.[8] Their secretion may be one of the components of smegma.

Some, including Satya Parkash,[9] dispute their existence.[10] While humans may not have true anatomical equivalents, the term may sometimes be used for tiny whitish yellow pimples occasionally found on the corona of the glans penis. The proper name for these structures is pearly penile papules (or hirsutoid papillomas). According to detractors, they are not glands, but mere thickenings of the skin and are not involved in the formation of smegma.[11][12]

See also

References

  1. Martin-Alguacil N, Schober J, Kow LM, Pfaff D (December 2008). "Oestrogen receptor expression and neuronal nitric oxide synthase in the clitoris and preputial gland structures of mice". BJU Int. 102 (11): 1719–23. doi:10.1111/j.1464-410X.2008.07989.x. PMID 18793302.
  2. Mech, L. David; Boitani, Luigi, eds. (2003). Wolves: Behaviour, Ecology and Conservation. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-51696-2.
  3. Odend'hal, Stewart, Karl V. Miller, and Stephen Demarais. "Preputial glands in Artiodactyla." Journal of mammalogy 77.2 (1996): 417-421.
  4. "Perfumes combine hundreds of ingredients to create 1 fragrance". The Galveston Daily News (Vol 149, Iss 144). AP. September 1, 1991. p. 44. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
  5. Kruger L (December 2003). "Edward Tyson's 1680 account of the 'porpess' brain and its place in the history of comparative neurology". J Hist Neurosci. 12 (4): 339–49. doi:10.1076/jhin.12.4.339.27915. PMID 15069865.
  6. Cowper, W (1694, 1724), Myotomia reformata; or, An anatomical treatise on the muscles of the human body, London Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. Tyson's gland at Who Named It?
  8. Batistatou A, Panelos J, Zioga A, Charalabopoulos KA (October 2006). "Ectopic modified sebaceous glands in human penis". Int. J. Surg. Pathol. 14 (4): 355–6. doi:10.1177/1066896906291779. PMID 17041207.
  9. Parkash, Satya; K. Jeyakumar; K. Subramanya; S. Chaudhuri (August 1973). "Human subpreputial collection: its nature and formation". The Journal of Urology. 110 (2): 211–212. PMID 4722614.
  10. "Surgical Temptation: A chance to cut, a chance to cure? | National Sexuality Resource Center (NSRC)". Archived from the original on April 30, 2009. Retrieved 2009-11-29.
  11. Hyman AB, Brownstein MH (January 1969). "Tyson's "glands." Ectopic sebaceous glands and papillomatosis penis". Arch Dermatol. 99 (1): 31–6. doi:10.1001/archderm.99.1.31. PMID 5761803.
  12. Parkash S, Rao R, Venkatesan K, Ramakrishnan S. Sub-preputial wetness: its nature. Ann Natl Med Sci India 1982; 18: 109-12 Fulltext
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