Friday, March 19, 2010

Size is important

Admit it or not, the size of baby's penis is often a source of parental pride. If the nature spoiled him, his father and mother can predict him future effortlessly: he will have of testosterone to be resold, will have risen well, while remaining one way or another susceptible at the needs of its circle of acquaintances - in brief, a leader - born, generous and honorable. Here is for the ideal scenario. But what happens when baby has a genital deformation? If he is Danish, we compare his family jewels to those of his neighbors of the Baltic. In Denmark, the increase of the genital deformations of male children, the decline of the average rates of sperm cells, and the increase of the rate of cancer of the testicle do not stop alarming the scientists. Since five years, a group of researchers of the country tries to determine the causes - and compare, to do it, the intimate parts of their fellow countrymen to those of the Finns. Why Finland? It is very simple: both countries have medical quality archives and populations opened to the medical research. Furthermore, a wild rivalry sets them for a long time - already at the time of the Vikings, the Danish and Finnish tribes made fun of knocks of bludgeon. But to whom returns today the palm of the most impressive bludgeons? There is the question. Why should this question interest you if you are neither Danish, nor Finn? Simply because the problems which meet these babies could be well caused by environmental toxin - toxin today present all over the world. According to the statistics, the Finns win easily this competition of measurements. A study led on 1.600 babies been born between 1997 and 2001 shows that the measurements of the testicles of the young Danes are lesser than those of the Finns. The scientists began by calculating the "volume ellipsoïde" at birth of the testicle, noticing then a considerable difference. In three months, the difference was even more pronounced, the growth testicle of the Finnish babies being three times superior on average of their young neighbors! When the results were published, the announcement seemed like thunder - to make you an idea, imagine that a very serious study asserts that the students of Yale have a smaller one than those of Harvard... " We spoke about it in the media a lot ". The researchers led another study, concerning the size of the penises of the children, which allowed to demonstrate that the big sizes were associated with high rates of testosterone. " The Finns beat us in all the categories: rate of sperm cells, sizes of testicles, rate of cancer ". You will say that these Scandinavians' thankless could already consider themselves happy to be big and blond ... the size of testicles and the penises (and, obviously, the congenital deformations) can say a lot about the health as much as on the reproductive success of the individuals. And the environmental factors which can explain that these problems already affect several countries of Western Europe and-probably part of North America.

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