Quote from: transgirl34 on May 31, 2018, 06:37:14 PM
On the topic of self-lubrication, he said that no-surgeon could really provide a trans-woman with a self-lubricating vagina because it's all just skin (which I've long suspected anyways, some girls who are operated on by Thai surgeons say they can soak through sheets, but I'm not sure how this is possible). He does use urethral tissue between the urethral opening and neo-clitoris, so that should provide some lubrication, he said.
Thanks, Transgirl, for posting a very nice synopsis!
I quoted the above section because there seems to be so much misinformation about "self-lubrication". I had SRS with Dr. McGinn, and she said pretty much the same thing Dr. Oates did. The neovagina is a skin graft. It is not, nor will it ever be, the same as a "factory-installed" vagina.
BTW, Dr. McGinn also uses the technique of fabricating the labia minora from urethral tissue, which is secretory. A male friend of mine noted I was "moist" inside of my vagina, and after some digital stimulation, I made "squishy sounds" like a genetic female. So it is possible to get
some self-lubrication, but this is not from the vaginal walls.
This has been confirmed in one study (however, note the sample size is small):
Do Histologic Changes in the Skin-Lined Neovagina of Male-to-Female Transsexuals Really Occur?Judith J. M. L. Dekker; J Joris Hage; Refaat B. Karim; Elisabeth Bloemena
Annals of Plastic Surgery. 59(5):546-549, NOV 2007
Abstract: Controversy exists on whether or not the epidermal keratinizing squamous epithelium of skin grafts and flaps applied to line a neovagina changes histologically to a nonkeratinizing mucosal type squamous epithelium after vaginoplasty in male-to-female transsexuals. To end this discussion, the aim of this study was to objectify the short-term and long-term histologic aspect of this neovaginal epithelial lining.
Biopsies were taken from the epithelium lining of the neovagina of 9 male-to-female transsexuals, from the moment of vaginoplasty up to 14 years after. These were stained with hematoxylin-eosin and periodic acid-Schiff stain for histologic comparison to normal vaginal biopsies.
Because no changes that might have been induced by local influences or hormonal therapy were found, we concluded that short-term and long-term changes in the histologic aspect of inverted skin flaps do not occur after penile and scrotal skin vaginoplasty in male-to-female transsexuals.But that is one study with only nine patients. Later, there was another article:
Cytology of the neovagina in transgender women and individuals with congenital or acquired absence of a natural vaginaDekker, Judith J. M. L. MD; Hage, J Joris MD, PhD; Karim, Refaat B. MD, PhD; Bloemena, Elisabeth MD, PhD
CYTOPATHOLOGY Volume: 28 Issue: 3 Pages: 184-191 Published: JUN 2017
Abstract: The primary objective of this study was to describe the cytological findings of bowel and (penile) skin‐lined neovaginas in patients with gender dysphoria (GD) and individuals with a congenital or acquired absence of a natural vagina. The secondary objective was to correlate the cytological findings with clinical characteristics such as oestrogen replacement therapy (ERT).
A retrospective review of an institutional pathology archive over a 15‐year‐period was performed to identify cytological samples of neovaginal vaults. The medical and surgical records of the patients identified (n=20) were evaluated. Well‐preserved nucleated squamous cells were found in 70% (14/20) of patients.
Neovaginal samples showing superficial, intermediate and parabasal cells plus Döderlein flora similar to normal cervical cytology were present in only 10% (2/20).
Conclusion:
Cytological findings of the neovagina resemble normal cervical cytology with superficial, intermediate and parabasal cells as well as Döderlein bacilli in a minority of cases. Because precancerous lesions and invasive carcinoma may develop in the neovagina, patients with neovaginas should be subject to cancer screening programmes.
Now that's a little different from the first study, but please note how narrowly-defined the conclusion is. It says that in 10% of the cases studied, the
cytology of a neovagina looked like a normal vagina.
It does not say it functions like one.Being my usual pedagogical self,
Terri