An erection is necessary for
natural insemination as well as for the harvesting of sperm for
artificial insemination, and is common for children and infants. After reaching
puberty, erections occur much more frequently. An erection occurs when two tubular structures, called the
corpora cavernosa, that run the length of the penis, become engorged with
venous blood. This may result from any of various
physiological stimuli, also known as
sexual stimulation and
sexual arousal. The
corpus spongiosum is a single tubular structure located just below the corpora cavernosa, which contains the
urethra, through which
urine and
semen pass during
urination and
ejaculation respectively. This may also become slightly engorged with blood, but less so than the corpora cavernosa. In some cases, the scrotum becomes tightened during an erection. In most adult uncircumcised males, the
foreskin automatically and gradually retracts throughout the various stages of erection, exposing the
glans, though some individuals need to manually retract their foreskin. Infants and young children often cannot retract their foreskin because it remains fused to the glans and erections consequently do not result in foreskin retraction.
Autonomic control In the presence of mechanical stimulation, erection is initiated by the
parasympathetic division of the
autonomic nervous system with minimal input from the
central nervous system. Parasympathetic branches extend from the
sacral plexus into the
arteries supplying the erectile tissue; upon stimulation, these nerve branches release
acetylcholine, which in turn causes the release of
nitric oxide from
endothelial cells in the
trabecular arteries. Nitric oxide diffuses to the
smooth muscle of the arteries (called
trabecular smooth muscle), acting as a
vasodilating agent. The arteries dilate, filling the
corpus spongiosum and
corpora cavernosa with blood. The
ischiocavernosus and
bulbospongiosus muscles also compress the veins of the corpora cavernosa, limiting the venous drainage of blood. Erection subsides when parasympathetic stimulation is discontinued; baseline stimulation from the
sympathetic division of the autonomic nervous system causes constriction of the
penile arteries and cavernosal sinusoids, forcing blood out of the erectile tissue through erection-related veins which include one deep dorsal vein, a pair of cavernosal veins, and two pairs of para-arterial veins between Buck's fascia and the tunica albuginea. Erection rigidity is mechanically controlled by reduction blood flow through theses veins, and thereby building up the pressure of the corpus cavernosum and corpus spongiosum, an integral instructure, the distal ligament, buttresses the glans penis. After
ejaculation or cessation of stimulation, erection usually subsides, but the time taken may vary depending on the length and thickness of the penis.
Voluntary and involuntary control The
cerebral cortex can initiate erection in the absence of direct mechanical stimulation (in response to visual, auditory, olfactory, imagined, or tactile stimuli) acting through erectile centers in the lumbar and sacral regions of the
spinal cord. The cortex may suppress erection, even in the presence of mechanical stimulation, as may other psychological, emotional, and environmental factors.
Nocturnal erection The penis may become erect during sleep or be erect on waking up. Such an erection is medically known as
nocturnal penile tumescence (informally:
morning wood or
morning glory). == Socio-sexual aspects ==