erectile tissue
Noun: * Erectile tissue: A specialized type of vascular tissue found in certain parts of the body that is capable of becoming engorged with blood, leading to enlargement and rigidity. This physiological process is central to functions like sexual arousal and thermoregulation in some species.
This term is used in anatomical, physiological, and medical contexts to describe the specific tissue responsible for erection. * It functions as a compound noun, typically modified by the body part it is associated with (e.g., penile erectile tissue, clitoral erectile tissue). * It is a non-count noun; one refers to "erectile tissue" in general or a specific mass of it, not "an erectile tissue" or "erectile tissues."
- The corpus cavernosum is the main erectile tissue in the human penis.
- An injury to the erectile tissue can result in dysfunction.
- The clitoris contains a significant amount of erectile tissue.
- The study focused on the hemodynamics of erectile tissue.
- Pathological Contexts: The term is used when discussing medical conditions.
- Peyronie's disease involves the formation of fibrous plaques in the erectile tissue.
- Priapism is a prolonged and often painful erection caused by blood being trapped in the erectile tissue.
- Erectile (adjective): Describing the capability of becoming erect. This is the adjective form from which the compound noun is derived.
- Erectile dysfunction (a medical condition).
- Erectile function.
- Corpus cavernosum (noun): The specific pair of sponge-like regions of erectile tissue in the penis.
- Corpus spongiosum (noun): The column of erectile tissue surrounding the male urethra.
- Vascular tissue (noun): The broader category of tissue involving blood vessels, of which erectile tissue is a specialized type.
- Cavernous tissue: A less common but technically accurate synonym, referencing the cavernous, blood-filled spaces within the tissue.
- Spongy tissue: A descriptive, non-technical term sometimes used, referring to its porous, sponge-like structure when engorged.
The term erectile tissue has a single, specific anatomical meaning. It does not have idioms or phrasal verbs associated with it due to its highly technical nature. Its core function is the capacity for tumescence (swelling and stiffening due to blood inflow) and detumescence (returning to a flaccid state due to blood outflow).
- vascular tissue capable of filling with blood and becoming rigid