Gynecomastia
gynecomastia
gynecomastia
Gynecomastia
Testosterone is a male hormone and has no influence in the development of breasts (mammary glands), estrogen the female hormone does,
Obesity and steriods are a big cause in male breast development.
Mammals (both male and female) have hair and mammary glands.
No, of course not. On the Howling series you can see a woman turn into a werewolf with rather gratuitous emphasis placed on the development of the lupis poly-mammary.
All mammals (both male and female) are characterised by having mammary glands.
Mammary glands are the source of milk production in female (and some male) mammals
Yes they do. A female's clitoris is the same tissue with the same nerve endings as a male's penis. The only difference is that during fetal development, that same tissue differentiated as either a male with a penis, or a female with a clitoris, during that stage of development. In an adult human, the tissues respond identically. The only difference is neurological as to how the stimulus from that tissue is interpreted.
The mammary papillae can also be referred to as the mammary gland or the teat. The adult female pig or aka sow, has anywhere from 4-9 pairs of teats. Each teat has streak canals which is where the milk is delivered to the end of the teat for drinking by her young, aka piglets.
One possible answer is gynecomastia, which is the abnormally large development of male mammary glands. Surgery can be done to reduce this, and during this time the patient is required to wear a vest to keep compressed
Gametophytic tissue