French Researchers Unsure Whether Female Squirt Is Pee

Nearly two decades ago, AVN published a short article based on a doctor's report provided to then-actress Sarah Jane Hamilton who, besides enjoying some early electro-stimulation sex toys, was also a squirter of some renown. After being accused of simply peeing on camera, she took a sample of her discharge to an actual physician for tests. The result? The doctor said that what came out of Ms. Hamilton was indeed a fluid that wasn't urine.

Thankfully, research on that common adult fetish is still ongoing, and a team of French scientists is about to publish an article in the Journal of Sex Medicine detailing their findings after examining seven women who "reported recurrent and massive fluid emission during sexual stimulation."

The scientists gave the seven women a series of pelvic ultrasound scans: One when their bladders were empty, one while they were being sexually stimulated but prior to squirting (BSU), and one after they had released their fluid during sex (ASU)—which fluid the scientists captured and analyzed, along with the women's actual urine.

The result? They still are not sure.

According to an abstract of the article, which will be titled "Nature and Origin of 'Squirting' in Female Sexuality," "Biochemical analysis of BSU, S[quirt], and ASU showed comparable urea, creatinine, and uric acid concentrations in all participants. Yet, whereas PSA [prostatic-specific antigen, similar to what the male prostate releases during sex] was not detected in BSU in six out of seven participants, this antigen was present in S and ASU in five out of seven participants."

The scientists' conclusion? "The present data based on ultrasonographic bladder monitoring and biochemical analyses indicate that squirting is essentially the involuntary emission of urine during sexual activity, although a marginal contribution of prostatic secretions to the emitted fluid often exists."

English translation: Yeah, squirt is mostly pee, but it definitely has some amount of "cum" mixed into it.

We're sure that research on this issue will be ongoing, but in any case, there are still jurisdictions where you can get busted for selling videos that depict squirting.