Can a pap smear/ pelvic take away your virgin tightness?!


Question:

Can a pap smear/ pelvic take away your virgin tightness?

Hi, I am 21 years old and I just had my first pap smear / pelvic. A few days latter when I started my period and I started to use my tampons, I found out I wasn’t as tight as before. I am a virgin and I want to stay that virgin tightness until I have sex when I am married ,but now I am wondering if that pap smear/ pelvic didn’t take that ‘ first time tightness’ away from me. Will I become tight again, or will I not ever be the same?

Additional Details

2 weeks ago
The doctor said my hymen is gone, we don't know why. Dose that mean I am still just as tight as your normal virgin?


Answers:

The physician or operator collecting a sample for the test inserts a speculum into the patient's vagina, to obtain a cell sample from the cervix. The procedure is usually just slightly painful, because of the neuroanatomy of the cervix. However, this can depend on the patient's anatomy, the skill of the practitioner, psychological factors, and other conditions. Results usually take about 3 weeks. Slight bleeding, cramps, and other discomfort can occur afterwards.

The vagina will contract after sometimes and return to its orginal shape. The shape can be distorted by prolong streaching of the vagina.

As for the first time tightness its the hymen that gives the tight feeling.

The hymen is not normally damaged by playing sports, using tampons, pelvic examinations or even straddle injuries.

Once a girl reaches puberty, the hymen tends to become quite elastic. It is not possible to determine whether a woman uses tampons or not by examining her hymen: only 43% of women report bleeding the first time they had sex; which means that in the other 57% of women the hymen likely stretched enough that it didn't tear.

It is rare to damage the hymen through accidental injury, such as falling on the crossbar of a bicycle. Although such an accident may cause bleeding, this is usually due to damage to surrounding tissues such as the labia. It is unlikely that an accident would damage the hymen without injuring any other part of the vulva. Therefore, damage to the hymen alone, described as an accident, would be seen as a strong indicator of sexual assault.

Many sources, including romance novels or anything that describes virginity loss, mistakenly indicate that the hymen is somewhere up inside the vagina. This is a common misconception. The hymen is part of the external genitalia.

Hope it helps answer your question.




The consumer health information on answer-health.com is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical advice or treatment for any medical conditions.
The answer content post by the user, if contains the copyright content please contact us, we will immediately remove it.
Copyright © 2007-2011 answer-health.com -   Terms of Use -   Contact us

Health Categories