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Hooded clitoris

by Patti Britton

question
Dear Dr Patti
Years ago a gynaecologist told me I have a 'hooded clitoris'. It did not matter much in my 20s and 30s, but it does now. What should I do? Viagra for women? More blood to the area? A little surgery? I take my oestrogen replacements and I don't have inhibitions. I'm just getting, gulp, older.
M


answer
Dear M
Thanks for writing about this unusual condition, which affects a small percentage of all women. All women have a hood (prepuce), which covers their clitoral gland (head); that hood is movable by pulling up on the inner lips, or labia minora. Women with a 'hooded' clitoris have a thickened membrane that protects the actual 'pearl' that is the clitoris. Often, before discovering the condition, a woman reports such problems as dulled sensation, no orgasms or complaints from partners who have been unable to rub them to ecstasy. Because most women require direct or indirect clitoral stimulation to reach a climax, having a hood can be a problem for pleasure and especially for that orgasmic release. Your gynaecologist is excellent for detecting your 'hood'.

This condition can become a difficulty for women of all ages. The issue is not age or ageing - it's how it affects your sexuality, your sense of self as a woman and your sexual response. If, up till now, you have never experienced troubles in that department, then be grateful. If, instead, this has been a lifelong issue that has contributed to dampening your sexual pleasure, alone or with a lover, then you certainly have options.

Usually, you can open up the hooded cover by applying natural oil on a cotton bud. Gently insert it under the hood around the perimeter. Doing this deliberately and steadily, on a daily basis, may release its grip. If you are truly hooded, where the tissue is grown over the clitoral area, then surgery may be in order. Ask your gynaecologist to advise you on the severity of your condition and consider having it loosened under the surgical knife. Don't concern yourself with thoughts of taking pills or increasing your hormone replacement therapy as the problem is purely mechanical. But think through your options thoroughly because surgery should never be undertaken lightly.

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