There
are three sexes in Salinas where being a pseudohermaphrodite is so common and
accepted alongside male and female. On the face of it, the small village
of Salinas in the Barahona Province of the southwestern part of the Dominican
Republic, is like many other Caribbean hideaways. The natives are
friendly, there's sandy beaches and the sun beats down often - but there is one
peculiarity that sets it apart from the rest of the world. At puberty, one
in 90 children born there make a natural transformation from girl to boy.
Referred
to as the ‘guevedoces’ which literally translates as ‘penis at 12’ - these
children are known in medical terms as 'pseudohermaphrodite' - and feature in a
new BBC 2 series called Countdown to Life - the Extraordinary Making of
You. “I remember I used to wear a little red dress,” said Johnny who at
24, was once known as Felecitia and did not have a penis. “I was born at
home instead of in a hospital. "They didn’t know what sex I
was. “I went to school and I used to wear my skirt. I never liked to dress
as a girl. "When they bought me girls toys I never bothered playing
with them. All I wanted to do was play with the boys.”
The
guevedoces were uncovered by Cornell University endocrinologist Dr Julianne
Imperato in the 1970s who travelled to the region to learn more about rumours
that girls were morphing into boys. And in the four decades since there
have been studies, more has been learned about the perfectly natural condition.
Believed
to have transpired through a rare genetic disorder, the condition is caused by
a missing enzyme that prevents the production the male sex hormone -
dihydro-testosterone - in the womb - and creates what looks like a baby girl on
birth. It is not until puberty, when testosterone flows, their voices
break and they grow a male sexual reproductive organ that they become
recognised as male.
BBC
presenter, Dr Michael Mosley said: “I hated going through puberty; voice
cracking, swinging moods, older brother laughing at me. But compared to Johnny,
I had it easy. “Guevedoces are also sometimes called “machihembras”
meaning “first a woman, then a man.” "When they’re born they look
like girls with no testes and what appears to be a vagina. "It is
only when they near puberty that the penis grows and testicles descend.
“When
Dr Imperato investigated the Guavadoces, she discovered the reason they don’t
have male genitalia at birth is because they are deficient in an enzyme called
5-α-reductase, which normally converts testosterone into
dihydro-testosterone. “By a quirk of chance Dr Imperato’s research was
picked up by the American pharmaceutical giant, Merck. "They used her
discovery to create a drug called finasteride, which blocks the action of
5-α-reductase. “It is now widely used to treat benign enlargement of the
prostate and male pattern baldness. For which, I’m sure, many men are truly
grateful.”
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