Smegma Could Be an Issue for Those With an Intact Male Organ Smegma. It’s an unappealing name for an unappealing male organ health issue. Guys have heard of it, but many don’t really know what it is. In the United States, that’s not surprising, for smegma is really only an issue for guys with an intact male organ. (However, it should be noted that women can also produce smegma, so a circumcised man could theoretically have encountered it with a female partner.) Therefore, some basic information on smegma follows. What is it, exactly? When a man talks about smegma on his manhood, he is generally referring to a foul-smelling, pale white or yellowish substance that is rather thick and clumpy. It is sometimes referred to as “head cheese” because it does have something of a cheese-like density. Although there may be other ingredients in it, most of smegma is made up of dead skin cells and oily secretions from the sebaceous glands. However, that physical description of smegma is not entirely accurate. In its initial state, the dead skin cells and oily secretions are not thickened and clumpy. Instead, they are more fluid-like, and in fact before it thickens, smegma is actually an effective natural lubricant. It also helps the prepuce to retract more smoothly and easily. (The word smegma, by the way, is derived from a Greek word that means soap.) Intact male organ It was mentioned that smegma in males is associated only with those with an intact male organ. That is because the dead skin cells involved tend to come from the prepuce. That’s not to say that a circumcised man has no dead skin cells, of course; everybody does, as skin cells are constantly dying and being replaced with new skin cells. But with an intact male organ, often the dead skin cells get trapped beneath the prepuce. Over time, if they are not removed, they mix with the oily secretions and eventually thicken into what is typically what is meant by the word smegma. www.man1health.com