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- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Subject: Re: sex, menstruation, endometriosis
- Message-ID: <1993Jan3.092649.572@news.wesleyan.edu>
- From: RGINZBERG@eagle.wesleyan.edu (Ruth Ginzberg)
- Date: 3 Jan 93 09:26:49 EDT
- References: <1993Jan2.224342.4115@cronkite.ocis.temple.edu>
- Distribution: world
- Organization: Philosophy Dept., Wesleyan University
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- X-News-Reader: VMS NEWS 1.20In-Reply-To: u081f131@astro.ocis.temple.edu's message of 2 Jan 93 22:43:42 GMTLines: 35
- Lines: 35
-
- In <1993Jan2.224342.4115@cronkite.ocis.temple.edu> u081f131@astro.ocis.temple.edu writes:
-
- > I have recently been told that having sex during ones period can
- > possibly lead to endometriosis.
-
- I believe that this is another old wives' tale, with roots in all the rest of
- the mythology that claims that one oughtn't have intercourse during
- menstruation. These myths come from the days when increasing the human
- population was a serious priority, & anything that threatened to decrease the
- number of births was considered "dangerous". The time during menstruation, of
- course, is the time when a woman is least likely to become pregnant as a result
- of unprotected intercourse.
-
- The new "possibly-causing-endometriosis" myth combines the old taboos against
- heterosexual intercourse during menstruation with new speculation (note: *not*
- demonstrated fact) that *maybe* endometriosis *might* be caused by so-called
- "retrograde menstruation" -- a pretty long shot so far as theories go, IMHO.
- Even if this *were* true (& there is no evidence for this part, so far), the
- second speculation here is that so-called "retrograde menstruation" (if it
- exists) *might* be caused by heterosexual intercourse during menstruation,
- ANOTHER *extremely* long shot, IMHO. This physiological phantasm postulates
- that vaginal intercourse would force sloughing endometrial cells
- up from the uterus, through the fallopian tubes, and into the abdominal cavity,
- where they would inexplicably implant themselves (instead of being reabsorbed
- by the body) & begin functioning like normal endometrial tissue. This is,
- physiologically, *extremely* unlikely, unless, perhaps, one is having
- intercourse with a high-pressure fire hose, & even then, the endometrial cells
- forced up into the abdominal cavity would most likely be too damaged to
- survive.
-
-
-
- ------------------------
- Ruth Ginzberg <rginzberg@eagle.wesleyan.edu>
- Philosophy Department;Wesleyan University;USA
-