Cone Papilla

Annotation

The cone (sometimes called papilla conusnikononis or papilla) papilla or "papilla" is a small papilla (hard-elastic bump), often bordered by a small outer ring ("velvet ring") - about 3 mm in diameter, and (usually) located at the top parts of the female genital organs located between the ovaries and the cervix on the back wall of the vagina.

These “hedgehogs” are located in the upper parts of the lower limbs of the cervix and individually have a diameter (depending on the diameter of the base) from 0 to 1.5 mm.[3]

In addition to its normal function (that is, serving as a barrier between different types of bacterial cells), the cone also performs some unique functions that enhance women's sexual arousal.[3][4]

Diagnosis

If one or more of the urchins surrounding the uterus must be removed by the gynecologist due to the presence of certain abnormalities, then it is concluded that they are called “skin folds”.

According to the gynecologist Johannes Singes Trelawney [1759 - 1821], with their help a woman could choose the most attractive partner for sex - while “these conical nipples should not stick out parallel to the walls of the vagina, but triangularly, at an angle