@diver removed their quoted postKhelif grew up in a Muslim nation. They don't play that over there. Gay sex in Algeria is punishable with prison.
If Khelif grew up in Algeria as a girl, there was good reason for it. Muslims would not have looked the other way her entire life if they suspected otherwise, nor would they promote Khelif to represent them.
So I disagree that she "knew" she was anything other than female.
n the last few months of a pregnancy, a baby goes through all kinds of changes. The eyes open wide, the bones fully form, and weight gain ramps up. For boys, it’s also when the testicles move from the lower belly to the scrotum, that pouch of skin below the penis.
But sometimes, one or both testicles don’t fall into place. That’s called an undescended testicle. It can happen to any baby boy, but it’s more common for those born earlier than expected.
More often than not, the testicle drops into the scrotum on its own by the time the baby is 6 months old. If it doesn’t, the child will likely need surgery.
What Causes It?
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https://www.webmd.com/parenting/baby/what-is-an-undescended-testicle
@Earl-of-Trumps saidThis procedure is called an Orchidopexy ….. a cute name don’t you think? 🙂
n the last few months of a pregnancy, a baby goes through all kinds of changes. The eyes open wide, the bones fully form, and weight gain ramps up. For boys, it’s also when the testicles move from the lower belly to the scrotum, that pouch of skin below the penis.
But sometimes, one or both testicles don’t fall into place. That’s called an undescended testicle. It c ...[text shortened]... Causes It?
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https://www.webmd.com/parenting/baby/what-is-an-undescended-testicle
@moonbus saidI had no idea it was all so complicated?
https://www.livemint.com/sports/news/[WORD TOO LONG].html
quote
French journalist Djaffar Ait Aoudia reportedly shared Khelif's medical report, drafted in June 2023 by expert endocrinologists Soumaya Fedala and Jacques Young.
The fresh media report claim ...[text shortened]... decisive for determining gender, and validates some people's claims they were mis-labeled at birth.
[Discovering you have this kind of genetic mutation can be a shock.
“The most recent woman we diagnosed with having XY chromosomes was 33,” says Claus Højbjerg Gravholt - an endocrinology professor at Aarhus University who spent the past 30 years dealing with DSD (differences in sexual development). His patient came to see him because she had no idea why she couldn’t get pregnant.
“We discovered she didn’t have a uterus, so she would never be able to have a baby. She was absolutely devastated.”]
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/crlr8gp813ko
https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/differences-in-sex-development/