Physical aspects of gender transition can go along with social aspects; as well as wearing gender affirming clothing, transgender people often hide features from their natal puberty; for example, transgender men
binding their breasts and transgender women shaving. Other physical aspects of transitioning require medical intervention, such as
transgender hormone therapy or surgeries. It is important to note that most transgender individuals will receive few, if any, surgeries throughout their lifetimes and some may never receive HRT. Barriers to accessing medical transitioning can include: a lack of financing, a lack of desire, or a lack of accessibility.
Puberty blockers Puberty blockers / hormone blockers are medications used to block natal sex hormones. For transgender youth, hormone blockers may be offered at the onset of puberty to allow the exploration of their gender identity without the distress and their use is deemed safe and effective as treatment for gender dysphoria in gender-diverse children and for
precocious puberty in
cisgender children; their use may be discontinued at any time if natal puberty-blocking is no longer desired, or if cross-sex hormone replacement therapy is initiated. For transgender adults, hormone blockers may be offered in a course with cross-sex hormone replacement therapy in order to treat gender dysphoria.
Hormone replacement therapy Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) is a medical treatment that replaces the primary sex hormones in the body, in order to develop the secondary sex characteristics of the opposite sex. Typically, masculinizing HRT uses the male sex hormone
testosterone, while feminizing HRT uses the female sex hormone
estrogen and sometimes
progesterone, as well as
testosterone blockers.
Voice training Voice therapy (or '
voice training') is
non-surgical gender-affirming treatment for the masculinization or feminization of the voice.
Transfeminine people will not experience any impact on voice pitch from feminizing hormone therapy (unless their natal puberty was sufficiently blocked), so voice training is very often undergone in order to learn how to speak in a higher and more feminine register.
Transmasculine people, on the other hand, will experience a marked lowering in pitch from masculinizing HRT (testosterone) to a cisgender male level, so vocal masculinization training is not as typical as vocal feminization training. Irrespectively, vocal masculinization training can help one learn to speak in a lower and more masculine register.
Surgery Voice surgery refers to a
surgical treatment that allows for the masculinization or feminization of one's vocal pitch.
Transfeminine people can undergo voice surgery to surgically increase their pitch range. Transmasculine people very uncommonly undergo voice surgery, as masculinizing HRT (testosterone) often lowers voices to a cisgender male pitch. Irrespectively, vocal masculinization surgery can be underwent to surgically decrease their pitch range. Facial surgery is gender-affirming surgery underwent on the face, usually
facial masculinization or
facial feminization.
Top surgery refers to gender affirming surgeries of the breasts. In transmasculine and/or nonbinary individuals, this may be a
double mastectomy (removal of breast tissue), and/or a '
'chest reconstruction'. In transfeminine and/or nonbinary individuals, this may be a
breast augmentation.
Bottom surgery refers to gender affirming surgeries performed on the genitalia. In transmasculine and/or nonbinary individuals, this may be a
hysterectomy (removal of the
uterus), a
oophorectomy (removal of the
ovaries), or both. A penis can be constructed through
metoidioplasty or
phalloplasty, and a
scrotum through
scrotoplasty. In transfeminine and nonbinary individuals, this may be a
penectomy (removal of the penis),
orchiectomy (removal of the testicles),
vaginoplasty (construction of a vagina), or a
vulvoplasty (construction of a vulva). ==See also==