145.73

Mar 30, 2009 21:52

A lot of you know about the no-sex rule, but I think you should be a little more informed about the details of the subject. You see... [DEEP BREATH ( Read more... )

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get_sometail March 31 2009, 02:09:12 UTC
(Geez, way to make it sound UN-sexy...)

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itcamefromcamp March 31 2009, 02:20:20 UTC
Oh, you'd like to hear about arousal ( ... )

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get_sometail March 31 2009, 02:23:54 UTC
G-geez! I don't want to hear about anything, dammit!

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itcamefromcamp March 31 2009, 02:58:43 UTC
Men who have frequent ejaculations, especially men in their twenties, may reduce their risks of prostate cancer later in life. Australian researchers reported in the British Journal of Urology International that they followed men diagnosed with prostate cancer and those without. They found no association of prostate cancer with the number of sexual partners as the men reached their thirties, forties, and fifties, but men who had five or more ejaculations weekly while in their twenties reduced their risk of getting prostate cancer later by a third. Another study, reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association, "found that frequent ejaculations, twenty-one or more a month, were linked to lower prostate cancer risk in older men, as well, compared with less frequent ejaculations of four to seven monthly."

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get_sometail March 31 2009, 02:59:43 UTC
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUGGGGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH

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itcamefromcamp March 31 2009, 03:29:12 UTC
The sperm for these ejaculations are stored in the male's testicles.

Under a tough membraneous shell, the tunica albuginea, the testis contains very fine coiled tubes called the seminiferous tubules. The tubes are lined with a layer of cells that, from puberty into old-age, produce sperm cells. The sperm travel from the seminiferous tubules to the rete testis located in the mediastinum testis, to the efferent ducts, and then to the epididymis where newly-created sperm cells mature in a process called spermatogenesis. The sperm move into the vas deferens, and are eventually expelled through the urethra and out of the urethral orifice through muscular contractions.

Between the seminiferous tubules are special cells called Leydig cells where testosterone and other androgens are formed.

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get_sometail March 31 2009, 03:34:47 UTC
Cripes how can you go on about this stuff?! Aren't you a girl?!?!

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