Doctors Say Women Can Experience ‘Blue Vulva’

Men have long complained about “blue balls”— but the phenomenon is not specific to men. Women can also suffer “blue vulva” after sex, according to a urologist. And it is all down to a rush of blood to the genitals during arousal, which causes an uncomfortable feeling for both men and women.

Speaking on her YouTube channel, which she uses to dispel medical disinformation, an associate professor of surgery at the University of Maryland, said “blue vulva” occurs when women are “aroused and don’t achieve climax.” The urologist explains that as blood vessels narrow in the vulva, uterus, and ovaries, this blood build-up can cause an uncomfortable heaviness. Thankfully, it’s not dangerous.

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Top Doctor Claims ‘Blue Balls’ Is Real

A high-profile Australian GP claims “blue balls” is real and not simply an excuse men come up with when they want sex. “Blue balls” refers to physical discomfort in the testicles caused by prolonged sexual arousal without ejaculation. Dr Sam Hay says the phenomenon does in fact exist—and there is evidence to prove it.

He explained: “If you become aroused for a long time, you get lots of blood going down to the testicles and it increases the pressure. And if you don’t [ejaculate] then that pressure becomes achy… I’ve found out that there’s research out there to prove that it exists.” Dr Hay stressed that testicles don’t actually go “blue” but they can take on “a sort of blue hue” because of the color of blood. He added that the pain and color will “disappear shortly afterwards,” and that if a man feels significant, prolonged pain in the testicles then it’s “another problem.”

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Check out more about a doctor claiming “blue balls” is real: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-11051631/KIIS-FM-doctor-says-men-blue-balls-prolonged-arousal.html