Female squirt or squirting, what the fluid expelled reveals
New studies reveal that when a woman squirts during the climax when having sex, or squirting. The fluid mainly consists of urine which is expelled from the urethra. Japanese scientists had a group of women and a man participate in a small study to analyze the contents of the squirted fluid women would expel from their bodies.
The male would stimulate all of the female subjects individually until they would expel a fluid known as a squirt to analyze it.
When individual women would reach a high level of arousal during sex and sexual stimulation, their urethra would expel a clear stream of fluid. This fluid would be odorless and it is what we know as squirting fluid or squirt. Scientists have long wondered what this fluid contains since its clear and odorless. So, a well-dedicated team in Japan decided to take on the satisfying task of finding out the actual contents of the female squirt and answering the questions of what are the contents of this fluid.
This study consisted in having one male stimulate a group of women between the ages of 30 and 50 years old. The task of the male was to stimulate each female manually or use his penis until the female produced a squirt. All female participants had reported that they had experienced squirting in the past when having sex, a requirement for the study to achieve a squirt from the female.
Before initiating the stimulation of the females and their genitalia, the volunteers had a urethral catheter inserted into their bladders to drain all the urine. Then they were injected with a saline solution containing a blue dye to observe how much fluid a woman would expel from the urinary tract.
Once all participants finished squirting, scientists would enter the room and collect all the fluids the women would expel to analyze the contents. The initial observation was that all five samples collected were blue in color. This proves that the fluid comes from the bladder and would constitute mainly urine.
In addition to that, four of the five samples had levels of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) which were detected. Researchers concluded that some of the fluid released by the women came from the Skene's gland, which is located below the urethra. None of the women reported having urinary incontinence before the experiment, which would rule out an excess of urine in the bladder.
Squirting is different from female ejaculation which is a thick whitish liquid that is produced before and during sexual climaxes. This fluid comes out exclusively from the Skene's glands. These glands are also known as vestibular glands (homologous to the prostate glands in males), which are two glands located on either side of the urethra. These glands are believed to secrete a substance to lubricate the urethra opening. But they are also believed to provide the fluid when a female ejaculates.