A infection or a STD. I highly suggest you going to a doctor ASAP
The rectum is part of the digestive system. Both are part of the excretory system. The urethra is part of the urinary system.
The portals of exit for chlamydia are the urethra, vagina, and rectum.
clitoris and rectum
No. You're thinking of the chicken or any type of bird that has this "feature," not cows. A cow's rectum is above the vulva, and the urethra and vagina is found in the vulva. The urethra is situated in the vagina but branches from the vagina to the kidneys. The entrance to the urethra is found in the first few inches of the cow's vagina.
Chlamydia can infect the vagina, urethra, rectum, eyes, and throat. It can't infect the face.
Bladder, kidneys, ureters, urethra, rectum, anus, large intestine, maybe small intestine as well.
Urinary system - kidneys, ureters, bladder, urethra Gastrointestinal system - colon, rectum, anus Skin (sweat)
Because the digestive system starts at your mouth and goes through the intestines that open at the other end for elimination of wastes from your colon and rectum. It is just the way it is, like tears come out of your eyes, feces comes out of your intestines by way of your rectum, and urine comes out of your urethra. It is how our bodies are put together.
Only men have prostates. The prostate produces semen. It is located directly beneath the bladder and in front of the rectum. The upper portion of the urethra passes through the prostate;
Yes. That would be a rectum fissure. They normally signal a colon tumor or some other colon complication. If this is you or anyone you know I would get it checked out. Urine can also pass through the vaginal which can be a tipped urethra or a urethra fissure. A tipped or tilted urethra is a normal genetic mutation and occurs in about 20% of woman.
Only if absorbed through the mucus membranes such as conjunctiva, mouth, nasopharynx, vagina, colon, rectum, urethra, and bladder.
a disposable item that allows a surgeon to examine the prostatic urethra digitally through the rectum without contamination of the operative field