Pakistani Husband Beat Wife After Being Unable to Penetrate the 20-Year-Old, Turns Out She Has a ‘Blind Vagina’; Know More About This Medical Condition
The 20-year-old Pakistani woman was beaten up and verbally abused because her husband was unable to have sex with her. He was having difficulty in penetrating her and hence she returned to her parents home. On doctor's visit, she came to know that she was suffering had a "Blind Vagina".
In an extremely rare case, a 20-year-old woman from Pakistan was diagnosed with a "blind vagina" which caused her to have difficulty in having sex. Her case that was reported by BMJ that said that she was having problems in having sex with her husband which even made her suffer verbal and sexual abuse from the husband. The 20-year-old was recently married to her husband who when was unable to have penetrative sex with her resorted to beating her up and abusing her. The husband was unable to penetrate her and hence ended up beating and thrashing the woman. Eventually, in six months she returned home to live with her parents. Vaginal Scraping: New Surgical Procedure Includes 'scraping' out the Traces of Your Ex from Intimate Area! How Safe Is It?
She, however, realised that there was something physically wrong and told doctors that she had had lower abdominal pain over the past three years never had a period and while her mother said that she was suffering from delayed puberty, BMJ reports said that her "Breast development was normal for age, and other secondary sexual characters seemed normal." Moreover, her ultrasound showed a normal-sized uterus and that her hormonal profile were all within normal limits. BMJ reports said, "On local examination, external genitalia was normal looking, and there was no vaginal discharge. She had a blind vagina of 2 cm in length. The ultrasound showed a normal-sized uterus and ovaries seemingly normal." Later it was identified that she was suffering from a "blind vagina." Below are the details about the condition.
What is a Blind Vagina?
"Blind Vagina" means a presence of the female reproductive canal that ends in a sac and does not connect to internal genitalia. Usually, the female reproductive canal is connected to the internal genitalia and the condition is called "blind vagina". The woman had a blind vagina of just 2 centimetres (0.7 inches) in length. She was also diagnosed with a transverse vaginal septum, where a horizontal "wall" of tissue formed during embryologic development essentially blocks the vagina. Usually, the symptoms include menstrual blood pool in the upper vagina that causes severe abdominal pain. The condition can often go unnoticed until the onset of puberty or when people who have it become sexually active and experience pain during intercourse.
The woman had to undergo surgery to connect the two parts of the woman's vagina. It cuts out the tissue blocking the passage and a mold wrapped in a condom was inserted into her vagina, left for a week into her vagina to stretch out. The mold was replaced with a silicon one that was used on and off for a further three weeks. BMJ reports said that, "The patient underwent vaginal surgery during which septum resection was done, and amnion grafting was performed to prevent stricture formation. The patient resumed successful coitus 3 months after surgery. There was no discomfort on coitus. She conceived 7 months later. Following this, the patient delivered a healthy baby boy through caesarean section at term."
(The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Jun 22, 2019 08:56 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).