Pharyngula

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Thursday, March 10, 2005

That revolting article about earwax and smegma

Not all the email I get is from cranks and creationist loons. Sometimes I get sincere questions. In today's edition of "Ask Mr Science Guy!", Hank Fox asks,

I was thinking recently about the fact that wax collects in one's ears, and suddenly thought to be amazed that some part of the HUMAN body produces actual WAX. Weird. Like having something like honeybee cells in your ear.

And then I started to think about what sorts of other ... exudates the human exterior produces. Mucus, possibly several different types (does the nose itself produce more than one type?). Oils, possibly several different types. That something-or-other that hardens into your fingernails. Saliva, if you wanted to count our frequently-open mouth as sort-of exterior. What else?

Of course I know something about this subject, having taught physiology for a few years. My years of experience have also led me to notice that it is always the guys who ask about disgusting secretions. Why is that?

Anyway, fingernails (and hair) are not secretions. They are composed of interlocked, dead cells packed internally with high concentrations of the protein keratin. So let's forget about those, and concentrate on the really yucky stuff instead: ear wax and another important kind of goo, smegma.

First of all, it's not at all unusual that we would secrete a wax. What's the difference between an oil, a fat, and a wax? Nothing but the melting point. All are esters (the products of condensation reactions between carboxylic acids and alcohols) with an aliphatic chain of carbon molecules. The length of the chain determines the volatility of the molecule; short chains are more fluid, long chains more solid. Something like olive oil will have shorter chains than something like beeswax, but all are fundamentally similar. They are all classified as lipids.

So earwax isn't that unusual—it's a compound on a continuum of perfectly normal lipid products produced by cells.

So what, exactly, is in earwax, or cerumen? Here's where it gets ugly. It's a combination of things:

  • Desquamated keratinocytes. Dead skin cells, in other words, that have peeled off of the epithelia lining the ear canal.
  • Sebum. This is an oily substance produced by the sebaceous glands that are scattered over most of your body. If you don't wash your hair for a few days, you know that oily, greasy substance that builds up? That's sebum.
  • Various waxes. The dense, waxy part of cerumen is a secretion from specialized glands in the ear canal, the ceruminous glands.

All of these combine into a greasy paste that helps protect the passageway into the ear from invaders. I know I wouldn't want to set foot in it.

For a more detailed analysis of the chemical composition of ear wax, one can do a little chromatography. About half of the dry weight of ear wax is lipid, and it consists of:

Everyone with a little biology or chemistry background will recognize these as quite ordinary products of cellular metabolism. Also, these particular compounds are found in similar concentrations in another place: the stratum corneum, or outer layer, of your skin, where the fats and waxes and oils are secreted in a layer that surrounds the cells, providing waterproofing and lubrication.

While rummaging around in the files, I also found an older paper (from 1947) that analyzes another similar substance: smegma. As you might expect from the fact that it is also a waxy, oily secretion from skin cells, it is also about half lipid, and consists of:

  • Cholesterol and cholesterol esters: 18%
  • Fatty acids: 71%

This paper is notable for a couple of things. It tells us where to get a supply of smegma.

Smegma is best obtained from dead horses in rendering plants or from anesthetized animals in a department of veterinary surgery.

That's good to know; I wouldn't want to make the error of trying to collect smegma from live, conscious horses.

The other distinctive thing about the paper is that it is one of the more disgusting experiments I've read about. The authors were testing the potential carcinogenic effects of smegma, and the experiment involved making up slurries of smegma and smearing it or injecting it into folds of skin on mice, and assessing their health. It had to have been a big job, slathering 400 mice with smegma every week, and treating another 400 control mice with ear wax.

This study found an increased frequency of various cancers in the treated mice: 57 smegma-smeared mice developed various kinds of cancer, versus only 12 of the controls. Before everyone gets all worked up into the circumcision debate, though, I'll mention that the paper is one of many that have tested this kind of thing, they acknowledge that other researchers have seen no carcinogenic effect, and that more modern papers suggest that there are no special carcinogenic properties of smegma. The paper shows another curious result, that the authors didn't even discuss:

There was no significant difference in the survival rates of treated and control mice up to the 400th day of life: 85 and 88 per cent, respectively, after 200 days; 74 and 80 percent after 300 days; 65 and 57 percent after 400 days. After 500 days, 47 percent of those treated with smegma were alive as compared with 30 percent of the controls. From the 600th day on, there was a marked difference (26 and 6 percent, respectively), and on the 700th day, the survival rates were 12 and 1½ per cent.

Personally, I think the smegmated mice were just so pissed off that they kept going out of infuriated spite.

By the way, Hank also asked about mucus, but I think I'll save the discussion about snot for another day. Right now, it's time for me to go to lunch.


Bortz JT, Wertz PW, Downing DT (1990) Composition of cerumen lipids. J Am Acad Dermatol 23(5):845-9.

Plaut A, Kohn-Speyer AC (1947) The carcinogenic action of smegma. Science 105(2728):391-392.


Trackback url: http://pharyngula.org/index/trackback/2009/osEcpBQ1/

Comments:
#18287: — 03/10  at  10:33 PM
When I was playing the part of Receiver during some home birth sessions awhile back, I noticed a particular grease, grey/white, that coated the bodies of the newborns. When I asked about this later, someone used the word "vernix" on me. Is this similar to smegma? I remembered thinking that it should, maybe, be rubbed into the baby (but it was a wet climate, and I had occasion to grease my boots regularly). Is this what ungulates are licking from the skin of their offspring? I didn't taste it, I don't think... ^..^



's avatar #18289: PZ Myers — 03/10  at  10:39 PM
Well, vernix is a cheesy, oily goop secreted by the sebaceous glands, so I suppose it is very similar...but I don't recommend telling mothers that their newborn is covered with smegma.

PZ Myers
Division of Science and Math
University of Minnesota, Morris



's avatar #18293: — 03/10  at  11:48 PM
Fascinating! Civilization makes us to clean and wash all oleous liquids we naturally produce, such as skin oils, and to replace them by artificial perfumed cremes and oils. Ear vax cleaning is an industry, specialized instrument sold everywhere. Is there a market for artificial ear wax for artificial perfumed smegma-like lubricants for us circumcized smegma-less males? Also, naturally produced mucus must be beneficial for something, artificial one must be even better. Yellow-greenish is so sickly, orange would be nicer.

Quod natura non sunt turpia



#18296: — 03/11  at  12:33 AM
Years ago I read a novel in which an ear-nose-and-throat doctor took the ear wax he removed from his patients and, as a hobby, made candles of it.
Is this possible?



#18300: Republic of Palau — 03/11  at  04:02 AM
Ewww, so basically earwax = blackheads?

I have pointed the person in my household, who has a nasty habit of tasting their own earwax, at this article. I hope never, ever to have to see that behaviour again after he reads it.



#18304: CKL — 03/11  at  04:29 AM
Now I remember why I went from the sciences over to the humanities. ugh....



#18312: Mrs Tilton — 03/11  at  05:20 AM
Xboy,

was that something by Pynchon by any chance?

As for whether earwax candles are feasible -- this is a science blog! There's only one way to find out. Be sure to write up your results -- sounds like a shoe-in for Nature.



#18314: Republic of Palau — 03/11  at  05:53 AM
And for hints on experimental methodology, see "Shrek". Because, as we all know, Hollywood always gets science right.



's avatar #18315: — 03/11  at  06:34 AM
Palau, earwax is harmless. Maybe too much cholesterol?

BTW, I always noticed that chimps in zoos love to sniff and taste their own smegma. I think the subject is still virgin to research.

Quod natura non sunt turpia



#18319: — 03/11  at  07:10 AM
so did breast milk evolve from one of these fatty cheesy incidental secretions?



#18331: — 03/11  at  08:47 AM
Sweet! More grist for the dinner table; my wife will make that face and my daughters will laugh. Better living through biology.



#18351: — 03/11  at  10:27 AM
thanks for the earwax stuff. I recently had ear surgery that was somewhat invasive (outer ear partially detached and pushed to the side, to allow better access to the creamy inside, then things removed (growth of excess skin into middle and inner ear -- aka cholesteotoma) or replaced (ear bone (dissolved by aforementioned cholesteotoma) with titanium widget, ear drum with some tissue made available by the initial invasion). Anyway, part of the recovery process seems to entail incessant secretion of ear wax and other quasi-liquids, especially while prone at night, so anything about earwax is an eyecatcher for me just now.



#18361: GrrlScientist (Hedwig the Owl) — 03/11  at  12:42 PM
I have one bone to pick with you, and it's minor, but important. Loons are perfectly wonderful birds who do not adhere to a creationist agenda any more than does any other bird. I am sure that you have offended all good loons everywhere, despite the fact that their populations are declining, due to habitat loss, among other things. It'll be a sad day when loons go the way of the Dodo.



#18378: Roxanne — 03/11  at  03:22 PM
See what you have wrought, PZ?

I beginning to think y'all got spring fever.



#18406: — 03/11  at  06:52 PM
Can I get a complete citation for the smeg article?



's avatar #18407: PZ Myers — 03/11  at  07:02 PM
Whoops...I put it out before I'd patched that in. I've fixed it now.

PZ Myers
Division of Science and Math
University of Minnesota, Morris



#18418: Hank Fox — 03/11  at  10:53 PM
Okay, the breast milk question has me intrigued now.

Regarding the creationist question "Of what use is half an eye?" the best answer I've heard cited the range of eyes that exist in animals today, from the simple eye spots of flatworms to the most complex "complete" eyes with variable-focus lenses, irises, etc. -- all undeniably useful to the organisms which characteristically sport them.

The argument showed how complex eyes probably evolved, by demonstrating a progression of usefulness in parallel with small steps in complexity.

So, PZ: Of what use is half a tit?

Do there exist in nature today a range of ... sustenance delivery systems ... that fall short of the modern mammalian teat-and-milk model, but that perhaps serve to illustrate a reasonable evolutionary pathway to breast-feeding?

But maybe that's a question for another thread.

And, oh yeah, don't forget about the snot lecture. <grin>



#18420: coturnix — 03/11  at  11:02 PM
Platypus has milk glands but no nipples. The secretion just flows down the hair and the pups lick it.



#18441: John Emerson — 03/12  at  10:17 AM
Pigeons, penguins, and flamingos all have special glands which secrete a kind of milk. (This is different than regurgitating half-digested food, which many birds do.) These three species aren't closely related at all, so it must have been independent origination. I don't know anything about the kind of milk produed or how it's produced, compared to mammalian milk.



's avatar #18444: PZ Myers — 03/12  at  11:42 AM
I've got to put the search function back in place here. I wrote about Mother's Milk some time ago.

PZ Myers
Division of Science and Math
University of Minnesota, Morris



#18723: — 03/15  at  11:01 AM
The novel was The Dick Gibson Show by Stanley Elkin. All about a late-night radio talk-show host and his oddball guests.



#18747: — 03/15  at  01:24 PM
Two other experiments spring to mind that might just top the smegma one. The first was the isolation of elemental P after concentrating gallons and gallons of soldiers' urine (1669, Brandt). The other was the isolation of < 1 mg of testosterone from several tons of homogenized bull testiscles! (1930's.



#18807: Ali — 03/15  at  08:08 PM
Ha! I want to know who coughed up the funding for the 'covering mice with smegma' project. How do you go about proposing that?



#18837: liz — 03/16  at  03:23 AM
Oh, the horse details. Well, there are stallions (with testicles) and geldings (without).

Yes, breeding stallions do have their penises washed before "live cover" -- breeding a mare -- or semen collection, for sanitary reasons unrelated to smegma. In the case of live cover, it is because the herd isn't closed -- there is the opportunity to pass infections from one mare to the next via the stallion. If the semen is being collected (that is, the stallion ejaculates into a device rather than into a live mare) it is to reduce the chance of introducing bacteria into the semen.

Geldings tend to develop a buildup of smegma because their penises don't become erect as often as stallions, so the mechanically, the material isn't dislodged. It isn't strictly speaking necessary to clean it, but the smegma buildup can cause an offensive odor and a sticky deposit on the inside of the horse's thighs. It can also build up on the inside of the urethra, partially blocking the flow of urine.

Most horses do not need anesthesia for the penis-washing operation. The stallions can't be sedated as it would interfere with erection and ejaculation. Good stallion management is training the animal to a routine, so the washing operation is just part of the prep process. Most geldings can also be conditioned allow penis-handling without a fuss. However, for the geldings, sedation is not uncommon, as many of the sedating drugs have the side effect of relaxing the muscles which hold the penis in the sheath, so it drops down, which makes the washing (or smegma harvesting) procedure easier and more efficient.

And the women's touch? There is an incredible amount of old wives' tales in the equestrian world -- and horsefolks anthropomorphize to an astonishing degree.



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