The two corpora cavernosa are expandable erectile tissues of the clitoris.[1] They are joined together along their medial surfaces by an incomplete fibrous septum.[2] Each corpus cavernosum is connected to the rami of the pubis and ischium by a clitoral crus.[1][3] There is connection to the ischiocavernosus muscle.[2] Each can be up to 7 cm long in an adult.[1]
The clitoris also has two vestibular bulbs beneath the skin of the labia minora (at the entrance to the vagina), which expand at the same time as the glans clitoridis to cap the ends of the corpora cavernosa.
Microanatomy
The corpus cavernosum is made of a sponge-like tissue. This contains irregular blood-filled spaces, lined by endothelium, and separated by connective tissuesepta.
Function
The corpora cavernosa fill with blood during clitoral erection.[1] Their size increases 2 fold to 3 fold.[1] In some circumstances, release of nitric oxide precedes relaxation of the clitoral cavernosal artery and nearby muscle, in a process similar to male arousal. More blood flows in through the clitoral cavernosal artery, the pressure in the corpora cavernosa clitoridis rises. The clitoris is engorged with blood. This leads to extrusion of the glans clitoridis and enhanced sensitivity to physical contact.