Duas Vaginas

Duas Vaginas




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Duas Vaginas
by Korin Miller Published: May 1, 2015
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YouTube Star Reveals She Has Two Vaginas
Korin Miller is a freelance writer specializing in general wellness, sexual health and relationships, and lifestyle trends, with work appearing in Men’s Health, Women’s Health, Self, Glamour, and more. She has a master’s degree from American University, lives by the beach, and hopes to own a teacup pig and taco truck one day.
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Cassandra Bankson is known best as a YouTube star who regularly offers up beauty tips to her legion of fans. Now, she’s sharing something way more personal. After experiencing ongoing kidney pain, Cassandra went to the doctor last year and discovered that she has two vaginas . Not only that, she also has two wombs and two cervixes.
"When we got the test results back, the doctor said I only had one kidney and flippantly added that I have two vaginas, as she suspected," the 22-year-old model said in a new segment she filmed for Bancroft TV.
Her condition is known as uterus didelphys, and can occur when the uterine system is developing in utero. Here’s how it works: The female reproductive system is fairly symmetrical with two ovaries and two fallopian tubes. The uterus is actually a fusion from either side of the system to create one uterus. Sometimes during development, things can go wrong and two uteruses, two vaginas, and two cervixes can be created.
This condition can manifest itself in a whole variety of ways, says Melissa Goist, M.D., a physician who specializes in obstetrics and gynecology and serves as an assistant clinical professor at The Ohio State University’s Wexner Medical Center. For example, a woman can have two vaginas, but just one uterus and one cervix. It’s also possible to have what’s called a “unicorn uterus,” where a woman is missing one side of her reproductive system. Goist says she has had six total patients who have had “some sort of duplicate system.”
But how is it possible to not know that you have two vaginas? Wouldn’t that be obvious? Nope, says Jason James, M.D., the chairman of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the Baptist Hospital of Miami.
“It’s not the type of thing that women find out on their own,” he says. “It’s also fairly easy for a gynecologist to miss it.” When you have a double vagina, there’s essentially a septum (like the one in your nose) that separates the vagina in half, he explains. That septum usually divides down the middle but often one of the vaginas develops to become the “dominant passageway” due to tampon use and sex, and the other gets essentially pushed to the side. 
“When the gynecologist examines the patient, the speculum more easily goes into the dominant vagina,” he says. If a doctor isn’t paying close attention, James says, he or she could miss a double vagina altogether.
Women who have a duplicate system will typically experience a normal period because their ovaries are on the same cycle, says Goist. However, they may notice that tampons don’t seem to work well since they’re probably only using them in one vagina.
In most cases, it’s actually possible to correct a double vagina, says Susan Lin, M.D., an ob-gyn in San Mateo, California. If a woman’s vagina is simply split in half, for example, the divider can be removed, creating one vagina.
Overall, uterus didelphys is pretty asymptomatic, says James. Some woman may have pain during sex, he says, but typically that’s not a problem.
However, there is a possibility of having difficulty carrying a baby to full term since women with the condition have uteruses that are smaller than a normal uterus. But James says it’s possible to have a healthy pregnancy. (He’s delivered three babies for one of his patients with a double uterus.)
So, while the concept of a double vagina is fascinating, it’s completely possible for a woman with the condition to live a normal life.
Jokes Cassandra: "I guess I'm twice the woman I thought I was."
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Anna Swan is reported to have had the biggest vagina ever in recorded history. The Scot was 7’5-1/2″, her husband was 7’11”, and she delivered the biggest newborn ever recorded: his head was 19″ around. Do the math.

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Vaginas ! So strange. So mysterious. So essential a component of the female anatomy. Sure, you may have a vagina. Or maybe you’re just curious about vaginas. Vaginas are like snowflakes. No two vaginas are alike. Of course, some vaginas are more exceptional than others. Like Hazel Jones, the woman who was so brave as to go on morning television to talk about her, not one, but two vaginas. Click through to find out more about Hazel’s lady flowers and other amazing vaginas in our vagina-tastic list.

Twenty-seven-year-old UK woman, Hazel Jones, went on morning television to talk about her one in a million vagina. Or should I say two in a million? Hazel suffers from a condition called uterus didelphys, which is a fancy way of saying the woman has two uteruses and two vaginas. This means she lost her virginity twice, suffers through double heavy periods each month, and can get pregnant twice at once if she’s not careful. She’s declined to have surgery to correct the problem because of the possible risks. I give her credit for dealing with so much lady plumbing. [ Huffington Post ]


Hazel is not alone. Lauren Williams is yet another chick with two vaginas. She has a bicornuate uterus, which means she has two vaginas, two cervixes, and two uteruses. I don’t know what I would do with the extra vagina. Rent it out?
In 1975, performance artist Carolee Schneeman stood on a table, covered herself in mud, and extracted a scroll from her vagina. Then, she read it. The paper evidence from Interior Scroll is now displayed as a work of art. And what has your vagina done lately?

In 1999, adult film star Houston had sex with a purported 620 men in one day, resulting in “The World’s Biggest G**gb**g 3.” In reality, there were about 125 dudes there. Still, nothing to sneeze at.
Tatiata Kozhevnikova has the world’s strongest vagina. She can lift 31 lbs. with hers. She’s even listed in Guinness World Records. And has special vagina barbells. OMG. WTF.
“Susan” was born without a vagina. As it turns out, one in 4,000 women are born with congenital absence of the vagina. How’s that work? “Externally, the genital area is perfectly normal, with clitoris, labia, and urethra all in place. But where the vagina should be there is only a small dimple or indentation.” Some opt for surgery. Susan “succeeded in creating her own vagina through the dilatation, or pressure technique.” I am speechless.

In America, women undergo plastic surgery to have their labia trimmed. (Read one woman’s testimony: “I Had Labiaplasty Surgery.”) In Rwanda, women engage in labia stretching. In their culture, elongated labia are considered an asset and is perceived to result in better sex for both partners. The World Health Organization considers the practice female genital mutilation. Others see it as part of a long-standing tradition.

Maoni Vi of Capetown, South Africa, has pubic hair that is 28-inches long. But does she braid it? That I do not know.
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What it really means for a woman to have two vaginas
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By now you've probably heard about the YouTube star with two vaginas . But if you're like us, her story left you with questions. Such as—why? And how?
Yes, model Cassandra Bankson, famous for her makeup tutorials, revealed in a video to her subscribers that she is "twice the woman" after finding out she has two vaginas and two uteruses, due to a very rare condition known as uterus didelphys. Although the 22-year-old released the video in 2014, it didn't go viral until last week .
So what does having "two vaginas" really mean? We did the research behind the anatomical science so you don't have to. Here's what we learned.
Bankson was diagnosed with uterus didelphys , a rare condition which only affects about 1 in 2,000 women worldwide . Doctors aren't sure why it occurs, but they do know how .
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During the embryonic stage of human development, females have two tubes ( uterine horn ) which fuse together to create one uterus. In women with uterus didelphys, this fusing never occurs, and the tubes develop separately—resulting in two uteruses. This can also mean having two vaginal openings and two cervixes, as in Bankson's case. Here's what that looks like:
Bankson says she always experienced brutal menstrual periods (makes sense in retrospect, given that she has two uteruses), but doctors didn't diagnose her until her twenties.
The challenge in diagnosing the condition is that women with uterus didelphys may look "normal" on the outside—as in, their labia, vulva, vaginal opening, and clitoris (what we colloquially think of as the " vagina ")—appear fine. Doctors have to look inside, using an ultrasound or MRI, to spot the issue. Women are often in the dark about their condition until they go to the doctor for some other problem (or, say, pregnancy).
Bankson, for example, went to the doctor complaining of back pain—only then did doctors discover that she had only one kidney and an extra uterus.
Several complications can arise from having uterus didelphys. First, as Bankson describes in her video, menstrual cycles can be unpredictable (she bleeds multiple times in a month). Second, pregnancy can be complicated for some ( but not all ), as women with the condition may be more prone to infertility, miscarriage, and premature birth than the general population. One reason? Both uteruses take up about the same space as one, so they tend to be smaller.
While extremely rare, some women with the condition have grown babies in both uteruses at the same time. A woman in Florida gave birth to fraternal twins in 2011 , one from each uterus. That same year, a woman in India also gave birth to twins from each uterus. And in 2014 a British woman gave birth to triplets , which meant an egg became fertilized in each of her uteruses, and one of those grew into twins. Three healthy baby girls were born.
Women with uterus didelphys often deliver via cesarian section, as all of the women above did.
Not all women with uterus didelphys have two vaginas like Bankson, but for roughly 75 percent of women who do, those two vaginas are separated by a membrane called the vaginal septum. While the exterior opening appears "normal" on the outside (as in, there's one vaginal opening), there are two roads to take inside.
The septum can make sex with a man a little, well, different for women with the condition. In some cases one vagina is larger than the other , and that's the one where the magic happens (i.e. the intercourse). In other cases one vagina might be blocked entirely , so the unblocked vagina would be used for intercourse.
Of course, some women have had sex in both—such as British woman Hazel Jones, who says she lost her virginity twice . #themoreyouknow
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A Ghanaian woman who lives in the U.K. recently went on a radio show to speak about a little-known medical disorder she's dealt with her entire life. Elizabeth Amoaa is one of very few people born with two vaginas and two uteruses, a rare condition known as uterus didelphys.


Amoaa, 35, tells Health that before she was 10 years old, she'd already been "in and out of hospitals" with recurring yeast infections. As she got older, she started having extreme pain with her periods , to the point where she would sometimes faint. Because uterus didelphys is so rare and often has no clear symptoms, it typically goes undetected, as it did in Amoaa's case.


In 2008, she was diagnosed with uterine fibroids , non-cancerous growths in the wall of the uterus that can cause excessive bleeding and pain. She quickly realized she had something more than just fibroids, however, because no matter what treatment she tried, her period symptoms continued. Then In 2010, she gave birth to a baby girl very prematurely.


It wasn't until 2015 that she had an MRI and was finally diagnosed with uterus didelphys.


Uterus didelphys, or "double uterus," occurs during fetal development, when the two tubes that normally form one uterus instead become two separate structures, according to the Mayo Clinic . A double uterus may hae one cervix that opens into one vagina, or each separate uterine cavity may have an individual cervix and vagina, leaving a woman with two vaginas, as Amoaa has.


Having uterus didelphys doesn't mean a woman can't enjoy a normal sex life and experience a healthy pregnancy. On the other hand, the condition does makes women more susceptible to developing fibroids, endometriosis, and ovarian cysts. It can also lead to infertility, miscarriage, and premature birth.


Besides fibroids, Amoaa has also been diagnosed with ovarian cysts and endometriosis. Her first baby was born premature, and she lost a second baby in 2016 to miscarriage.


It's not clear why some women are born with the disorder, and there's no cure or quick fix for uterus didelphys. To manage the complications of having two vaginas and two uteruses, Amoaa has had about seven surgeries.


Amoaa says her story is ongoing, and she's not sure where it will take her from here. But she is sure that there's a silver lining to her struggles. In 2017, she founded the Special Lady Foundation , an organization that aims to educate young women about gynecological conditions. She travels to Ghana multiple times a year to speak to women who live in a culture where ob-gyn issues are seen as taboo.


"It's been kind of a blessing in disguise, to be able to use my experience to help other women," she says. Her number one piece of advice: Never ignore any symptoms, no matter how small. "Don't keep it to yourself."


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