| Literature DB >> 30805570 |
Laura Buggio1, Federica Facchin2, Laura Chiappa3, Giussy Barbara4, Massimiliano Brambilla5, Paolo Vercellini1,6.
Abstract
Purpose: We aim to provide a comprehensive overview of the health consequences of female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C), with a particular focus on the psychosexual implications of this practice and the overall impact of reconstructive plastic surgery.Entities:
Keywords: FGM/C; clitoral reconstruction; female genital cutting; female genital mutilation; psychological complications; sexual function
Year: 2019 PMID: 30805570 PMCID: PMC6386073 DOI: 10.1089/heq.2018.0036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Equity ISSN: 2473-1242
The 2016 WHO and UNICEF Classification of Female Genital Mutilation[a]
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References[1,13].
UNICEF, United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund; WHO, World Health Organization.

Twenty-three year old nulliparous woman with a female genital mutilation type II. © Massimiliano Brambilla 2018.

Twenty-one year old nulliparous woman with a female genital mutilation type IIIb. © Massimiliano Brambilla 2018.
Health Risks Associated with Female Genital Mutilation
| Short-term complications |
| Extreme pain |
| Hemorrhage |
| Shock (hemorrhagic, neurogenic, septic) |
| Infection (wound infection, septicemia, gangrene, tetanus, genital and reproductive tract infections, urinary tract infections, possible association with increased risk of HIV and HCV due to the use of the same surgical instrument without sterilization) |
| Necrotizing fasciitis |
| Acute urine retention, urethral injury |
| Death (secondary to severe bleeding or septicemia) |
| Long-term complications |
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Obstetrical risks referred to studies performed in low-income countries; studies performed in Western setting suggest that a high standard of obstetric care can minimize these complications.[15]
FGM, female genital mutilation.
Summary of Studies on Sexual Function That Have Adopted the Female Sexual Function Index as Evaluating Tool
| Source | Study design | Country | Number of patients enrolled | FSFI full-scale score | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Catania et al.[ | Case–control study | Italy | 114 ( | N.A. | No significant differences between the two groups in lubrication and pain domains. Infibulated women obtained significantly higher scores in desire, arousal, orgasm, and satisfaction. |
| Alsibiani and Rouzi[ | Case–control study | Saudi Arabia | 260 ( | 21.4±4.4 in the FGM/C group vs. 23.5±5 in the control group | Significantly lower full-scale score in the FGM/C group. No statistically significant group differences in desire and pain scores. Statistically significant lower arousal, lubrication, orgasm, satisfaction, and lubrication in the FGM/C group |
| Anis et al.[ | Cross-sectional comparative study | Egypt | 650 ( | 23.9±2.2 in the FGM/C group vs. 26.8±2.2 in the control group | Significantly lower full-scale score in the FGM/C group. All domain scores, except for sexual pain, were significantly lower in the FGM/C group as compared with those of the uncut women. |
| Ibrahim et al.[ | Cross-sectional study | Egypt | 509 ( | 20.1±3.5 (including women with and without FGM/C) | 65% of the FGM/C participants reported sexual dysfunction. Circumcision was the leading factor associated with sexual dysfunction (OR 6.5, 95% CI: 2.6–15.8) |
| Mohammed et al.[ | Cross-sectional study | Egypt | 2106 ( | 29.6±2.1 in type I FGM/C, 10.7±3.4 in type II FGM/C, and 34.2±0.3 in the non-FGM/C group | Desire, arousal, lubrication, orgasm, and satisfaction were significantly poorer in women with type II FGM/C. Pain was significantly higher in type II FGM/C. |
| Abdulcadir et al.[ | Cross-sectional study | Switzerland | 30 ( | 27.0±3.1 in the FGM/C group vs. 30.7±4.2 in the control group | Significantly lower full-scale score in the FGM/C group. No significant differences between the two groups in desire, orgasm, and satisfaction. Women with FGM/C reported significantly lower arousal and lubrication, and greater pain relative to uncut women. |
| Biglu et al.[ | Case–control study | Iran | 280 ( | 17.9±5.3 in the FGM/C group vs. 25.3±4.3 in the control group | Significantly lower full-scale score in the FGM/C group. All domains were significantly lower in the FGM/C group as compared with uncut women. |
| Mahmoud[ | Case–control study | Egypt | 544 ( | 14.3±5.9 in the FGM/C group vs. 25.9±3.4 in the control group | Significantly lower full-scale score in the FGM/C group. All domains were significantly lower in the FGM/C group relative to those of the uncut women. |
| Vital et al.[ | Prospective | France | 12 | 17 (IQR: 13–21) (before surgical reconstruction) vs. 29 (IQR: 24–34) (6 months after surgery) | Desire, arousal, orgasm, and pain were the most affected domains before surgical correction. Significant improvement of FSFI full-scale score after surgery. The ameliorations were significant in all subdomains, except for lubrication. |
| Rouzi et al.[ | Cross-sectional study | Saudi Arabia | 107 | 21.2±6.37 (26.8±1.9 in type I; 21.6±2.8 in type II; 14.9±5.5 in type III) | Nine out of 10 women with FGM/C suffered from sexual dysfunction. Women with type III FGM/C showed the worst scale scores. |
| Ismail et al.[ | Case–control study | Egypt | 394 ( | 19.8±7.1 in the FGM/C group vs. 23.3±8.1 in the control group | Significantly lower full-scale score in the FGM/C group. All domains were significantly lower in the FGM/C group relative to those of the uncut women. No statistically significant difference between the two types of FGM/C as regards total and individual domain scores except for the pain domain. |
| Daneshkhah et al.[ | Cross-sectional study | Iran | 200 ( | 18.2±6.3 in the FGM/C group vs. 23.9±7.1 in the control group | Significantly lower full-scale score in the FGM/C group. All domains were significantly lower in the FGM/C group relative to those of the uncut women. |
| Esho et al.[ | Cross-sectional study | Kenya | 314 married women ( | 23.9±6.6 in the FGM/C group (cut before marriage) vs. 22.8±4.9 in the FGM/C group (cut after marriage) vs. 25.3±3.5 in the control group (married and uncut) | Women cut after marriage scored significantly lower than the uncut. No statistically significant difference between the two FGM/C groups. Among the sexual functioning domains, lubrication, orgasm, and satisfaction were significantly different across the three groups. Desire, arousal, and pain were not statistically different. |
| Manero and Labanca[ | Prospective | Spain | 32 ( | 16 (IQR: 12–21) (before surgical reconstruction) vs. 29 (IQR: 26.1–31.2) (6 months after surgery) | Significant improvement of FSFI full-scale score after surgery. The ameliorations were significant in all subdomains, except for desire. |
CI, confidence interval; FGM/C, female genital mutilation/cutting; FSFI, Female Sexual Functioning Index; IQR, interquartile ranges; N.A., not applicable; OR, odds ratio.