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More articles by Dr. Soucasaux: Anatomical drawings - Anovulatory cycles - Archetypal aspects of the female genitals - The breasts: some morphological aspects - Colposcopy - Comments on the corpus luteum and related aspects - Comments on some anatomical and symbolic aspects of the female pelvis - The curious relations between androgens and estrogens in women - Drospirenone Oral Contraceptives - Due to prohibition, Brazilian women don't have access to modern medicinal abortion - Endocrinology of menstruation - The Fallopian tubes - Female sexual response - The Gräfenberg Spot (G-Spot) - The Gynecologic Palpation (descendant of "The Touch") - Gynecological assistance: the three basic areas - Gynecology and Gynecologic Surgery - Gynecologist versus obstetrician: what lies behind the combination? - "Gyneco-obstetric-surgical" stubborness and the perpetuation of one of the greatest mistakes of women's medicine - Hypermenorrhea and/or Menorrhagia (Prolonged and/or Excessive Menstrual Bleedings) - Hypertrichosis, Hirsutism and Androgenic Manifestations in Women - Mayer-Rokitansky-Kuster-Hauser (MRKHauser) Syndrome - Menstrual toxin: An old name for a real thing? - Nature and the ovaries - On the Intimate, or Small-Scale, Mechanisms of Menstruation - On the Strange Nature of the Ovaries - Oral hormonal contraceptives (the "Pill") - The Ovaries: Some Functional and Archetypal Considerations - Peculiarities of the Female Genitals' Sensory Innervation - Physiology of menstruation - Polycystic ovaries syndrome - The Possibility of Becoming Pregnant, Its Implications for Women, and Abortion - Premenstrual congestion of the breasts - Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) - The Psychology of Gynecology part 1 (part 2) - Psychosomatic and symbolic aspects of menstruation - Psychosomatic gynecology - Some Details on the Function of the Hypothalamus-Pituitary-Ovaries Axis - Stanislav Grof's Perinatal Matrixes of the Unconscious and Women's Medicine - Symmetric Patterns in the Female Genitals - Thoughts on Female Sexual Psychology - Uninterrupted use of hormonal contraceptives for menstrual suppression: why I do not recommend it - The uterine cervix - Uterine contractility - The Uterus and the Female "Passive-Active" - Women's corporeal consciousness and experience - Women's Experience of the Breasts - Women's Undesired Pregnancies and Women's Right to Abortion and see his Art of Menstruation


On the Strange Nature of the Ovaries

Dr. Nelson Soucasaux , Brazilian gynecologist

Due to the enormous histological, morphological and biochemical transformations inherent in their physiology, the ovaries exhibit a high degree of "unquietness" on the part of the cellular elements that constitute them. Their inner "agitation" along the fertile years of women's lives is simply amazing. Nevertheless, this fact becomes especially problematic because the ovarian follicles, the basic functional structures of the female gonads, are neither renewable nor able to give origin to new follicles. (Before starting its development and growth, each ovarian follicle consists of an oocyte surrounded by a layer of follicular cells. As these follicular cells proliferate and undergo several morphological and functional changes, they produce the ovarian hormones.) (Important: Regarding the recent discovery of the formation of new follicles in the ovaries of adult mice, see Notes 2 and 3 below the article.)

Considering that the ovarian follicles - the basic functional and reproductive structures or "unities" of the ovaries - are neither renewable nor capable of originating new follicles, all the physiological processes that take place along each ovarian cycle inevitably lead to complete ovarian depletion about the age of 50. The waste of follicles along women's lives is enormous and the ovarian endocrine function is just the one that is more harmed by that. It is possible that this continuous process of growth, transformation and involution of functional structures may also be one of the causes for the astonishing variety of existing ovarian pathologies, not only functional and organic but also benign and malignant.

The very peculiar features of the female gonads deserve careful consideration that must transcend the usual exclusive and restricted organism. We should ask what might lie behind the way nature "programmed" the ovaries. The histological structure which the ovaries are endowed with is too "unsophisticated" to face the complexity and the importance of their function. It is also possible that the kind of functional activity which the ovaries are subjected to may cause "injuries" to their structure, slowly and gradually harming them along life.

Throughout women's fertile years, the ovaries are continuously subjected to: 1) processes of growth, transformation, involution, regression and disappearance of functional structures; 2) processes of compression and distention resulting from follicular growth and formation of the corpus luteum; 3) traumas on their surface due to the ovulatory follicular rupture; 4) an infinitude of highly complex hormonal and biochemical actions; 5) possible still unknown neurovascular phenomena. The female gonads are, over and above all, organs that are in constant histological and morphological transformation. The degree of "unquietness" of the main structures that constitute the ovaries is enormous. E.L. Potter remarks: "From early embryonic life until well after the menopause, the ovary exhibits a greater day-to-day variation pattern than any other structure of the body" (quoted by Sylvany Filho, A., "O Ovário Humano do Nascimento à Senescência Histofisiologia do Ovário" in: Tourinho; Bastos; Moreira - "Ginecologia da Infância e da Adolescência," Byk-Procienx, Rio de Janeiro, 1977).

In my book "Novas Perspectivas em Ginecologia" ("New Perspectives in Gynecology") (Imago Editora, Rio de Janeiro, 1990) I observed that, sometimes, the very female nature seems to turn against itself. This fact becomes especially remarkable in relation to the ovaries, not only regarding their physiological "normal" destiny (that unfortunately leads to their precocious depletion), but also concerning the great number of pathologies that affect them. Botella Llusiá observes that all the embryonic and physiological complexity of the ovaries, associated with the great reproductive potentiality of their cells, contributes to making the female gonads the organs that exhibit the greatest number of pathologies in the body (Llusiá, B.,"Tratado de Ginecologia, Tomo 3, Enfermedades del Aparato Genital Femenino," Editorial Científico-Médica, Barcelona, Madri, 1965).

Though discussing the astonishing diversity of ovarian pathologies is not the purpose of this article, these observations by Botella Llusiá confirm the intrinsic high degree of "unquietness" of the cellular elements that constitute the female gonads. Such "unquietness," characterized by a somewhat "confused" pattern of proliferation and atrophy of the cellular elements that constitute the non-renewable basic functional structures of the ovaries, leads to the precocious depletion of these organs and facilitates the appearance of innumerable pathologies.

The capacity of proliferation and metamorphosis of the female gonads is amazing, reaching a truly "frantic" pattern along women's fertile years. Considering all of this, one more unusual and paradoxical feature of the ovaries becomes evident through the fact that, despite the enormous proliferative capacity of their cells, even so the female gonads are absolutely incapable of multiplying their fundamental histo-functional unities, the ovarian follicles. As a consequence, the self-renewal of the ovarian endocrine-reproductive unities - the ovarian follicles - is entirely impossible. Thus, the enormous cellular "agitation" characteristic of the female gonads, physiologically - and paradoxically - contributes to accelerating their depletion, due to the enormous waste of follicles that are consumed during this process.

As a consequence, about the age of 50 women become deprived of the estrogens they need so much. As Lauritzen remarked quite well, the ovary is the first endocrine gland that ceases to function. (Lauritzen, C; van Keep, P.A.: "Envelhecimento e Estrogênios" ["Aging and Estrogens"] - Brazilian Edition, Medisa, São Paulo, 1975 ).


Note 1: For a better understanding of this article, see my "The Ovaries: Some Functional and Archetypal Considerations" and "Nature and the Ovaries," published here at the MUM.

Note 2: As to the recent discovery of the formation of new oocytes in the ovaries of adult mice, from the clinical and practical standpoint it does not change the basic facts exposed in this article, which obviously concerns women's ovaries. Regardless of the importance of the aforementioned discovery for biology, I think it is too early for trying to draw conclusions that may be applicable to women based on the results of these preliminary experiments on mice. Though I do believe in the possibility of the existence of stem cells able to originate new follicles in women's ovaries and also do not doubt that, at least, some new follicles may be formed along adult women's lives, the fact is that, in women, the entire ovarian follicular population do deplete throughout life, culminating with menopause. This means that even if some new follicles are formed throughout adult women's lives, this formation would be so insignificant that these newly formed follicles are also consumed by the events that characterize ovarian physiology and, therefore, also disappear through the process of follicular atresia (death).

Note 3: Nevertheless, in the face of the discovery mentioned above, it is obvious that now we must search for the existence of these stem cells able to give rise to new follicles in women's ovaries. If researchers can demonstrate that such cells also exist in women, of course several new possibilities arise for the future. Even so, in terms of safe and successful medical usage, I think we must be very, very careful in our speculations on the subject.

The text above is an adapted excerpt from my book "Os Órgãos Sexuais Femininos: Forma, Função, Símbolo e Arquétipo" ("The Female Sexual Organs: Shape, Function, Symbol and Archetype"), published by Imago Editora, Rio de Janeiro, 1993. For information on the book, see page http://www.nelsonginecologia.med.br/orgaos.htm, at my Web site www.nelsonginecologia.med.br

Copyright Nelson Soucasaux 1993, 2004

__________________________________________________

Nelson Soucasaux is a gynecologist dedicated to clinical, preventive and psychosomatic gynecology. Graduated in 1974 by Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, he is the author of several articles published in medical journals and of the books "Novas Perspectivas em Ginecologia" ("New Perspectives in Gynecology") and "Os Órgãos Sexuais Femininos: Forma, Função, Símbolo e Arquétipo" ("The Female Sexual Organs: Shape, Function, Symbol and Archetype"), published by Imago Editora, Rio de Janeiro, 1990, 1993. He has been working in his private clinic since 1975.

Web site (Portuguese-English): www.nelsonginecologia.med.br

Email: nelsons@nelsonginecologia.med.br


NEWS | homepage | LIST OF ALL TOPICS | MUM address & What does MUM mean? | e-mail the museum | privacy on this site | who runs this museum?? |
Amazing women! | the art of menstruation | artists (non-menstrual) | asbestos | belts | bidets | founder bio | Bly, Nellie | MUM board | books: menstruation and menopause (and reviews) | cats | company booklets directory | contraception and religion | costumes | menstrual cups | cup usage | dispensers | douches, pain, sprays | essay directory | extraction | famous women in menstrual hygiene ads | FAQ | founder/director biography | gynecological topics by Dr. Soucasaux | humor | huts | links | masturbation | media coverage of MUM | miscellaneous | museum future | Norwegian menstruation exhibit | odor (olor)| pad directory | patent medicine | poetry directory | products, current | religion | your remedies for menstrual discomfort | menstrual products safety | science | shame | slapping, menstrual | sponges | synchrony | tampon directory | early tampons | teen ads directory | tour of the former museum (video) | underpants directory | videos, films directory | Words and expressions about menstruation | Would you stop menstruating if you could? | What did women do about menstruation in the past? | washable pads
More articles by Dr. Soucasaux: Anatomical drawings - Anovulatory cycles - Archetypal aspects of the female genitals - The breasts: some morphological aspects - Colposcopy - Comments on the corpus luteum and related aspects - Comments on some anatomical and symbolic aspects of the female pelvis - The curious relations between androgens and estrogens in women - Drospirenone Oral Contraceptives - Due to prohibition, Brazilian women don't have access to modern medicinal abortion - Endocrinology of menstruation - The Fallopian tubes - Female sexual response - The Gräfenberg Spot (G-Spot) - The Gynecologic Palpation (descendant of "The Touch") - Gynecological assistance: the three basic areas - Gynecology and Gynecologic Surgery - Gynecologist versus obstetrician: what lies behind the combination? - "Gyneco-obstetric-surgical" stubborness and the perpetuation of one of the greatest mistakes of women's medicine - Hypermenorrhea and/or Menorrhagia (Prolonged and/or Excessive Menstrual Bleedings) - Hypertrichosis, Hirsutism and Androgenic Manifestations in Women - Mayer-Rokitansky-Kuster-Hauser (MRKHauser) Syndrome - Menstrual toxin: An old name for a real thing? - Nature and the ovaries - On the Intimate, or Small-Scale, Mechanisms of Menstruation - On the Strange Nature of the Ovaries - Oral hormonal contraceptives (the "Pill") - The Ovaries: Some Functional and Archetypal Considerations - Peculiarities of the Female Genitals' Sensory Innervation - Physiology of menstruation - Polycystic ovaries syndrome - The Possibility of Becoming Pregnant, Its Implications for Women, and Abortion - Premenstrual congestion of the breasts - Premenstrual syndrome (PMS) - The Psychology of Gynecology part 1 (part 2) - Psychosomatic and symbolic aspects of menstruation - Psychosomatic gynecology - Some Details on the Function of the Hypothalamus-Pituitary-Ovaries Axis - Stanislav Grof's Perinatal Matrixes of the Unconscious and Women's Medicine - Symmetric Patterns in the Female Genitals - Thoughts on Female Sexual Psychology - Uninterrupted use of hormonal contraceptives for menstrual suppression: why I do not recommend it - The uterine cervix - Uterine contractility - The Uterus and the Female "Passive-Active" - Women's corporeal consciousness and experience - Women's Experience of the Breasts - Women's Undesired Pregnancies and Women's Right to Abortion and see his Art of Menstruation