Thursday, January 19, 2012

60 Years of Research Results Confirm No G-Spot

many women swear to have erotic points in the body or so-called G-spot. Unfortunately, the study results for 60 years against a variety of research shows that science today still can not find the G-spot in women's bodies.  
 
Researchers have used survey methods, brain scans and biopsies to women. All trying to figure out orgasmic area that is presumably located in the vaginal wall, known as the G-spot.

Based on a review of 96 studies have been published, a team of researchers from Israel and the United States finally came to one conclusion.

Without a doubt, a secret anatomical entity called G-spot does not exist. Indeed, our results are not absolute, and other scientists may someday be able to find something that is not answered by us. But, they will need new technologies to can find it.

Name of the G-spot is taken to honor the late Dr. Ernst Grafenberg. In 1950, he described a very sensitive part of an area of ​​1-2 cm in the vaginal wall.

These explanations make curious Grafenberg Western medicine to define and learn more about this area. It is said that the area that came to be called G-Spot is located a few inches inside the vaginal opening, on the vaginal wall of women.

But the survey has been done to the women actually just makes the search grow confusing. From the review of 29 surveys and observational studies, Kilchevsky concluded that the majority of women believe that the G-spot really exist. But some of them also admitted that they could not find it.

Other researchers have been looking for physical evidence of the existence of the G-Spot. Biopsy or the removal of tissue for laboratory examination of the vaginal wall is often found that the nerve endings in the G-spot more than any other part of the vaginal wall.

But Kilchevsky and his colleagues also found the research biopsy had inconclusive results, and sensitivity in the human body is not determined by the number of nerve endings alone.

A study in 2008 had undertaken to observe the vaginal wall using ultrasound imaging. The results, found evidence of the existence of thick tissue in the area of ​​the G-spot in women who claimed to experience vaginal orgasm.

Women who claimed to have never experienced vaginal orgasms have a thin tissue sections. However, this study and other studies with imaging techniques still fail to find exactly what part is called the G-spot is.

I hope my conclusions support women who are concerned can not find her G-spot. Women who can not reach orgasm through vaginal penetration does not have anything wrong with her body.

However Kilchevsky also not assume that women who claimed to have a G-spot is insane. According to him, the sensation is felt may be a continuation of the clitoris. People often assume indifference and clitoral tissue extends into the inside of the body as a G-spot.

A team of researchers at Rutgers University recently asked some women stimulate themselves while in an fMRI brain scan machine. The results of brain scans show that when women stimulates the clitoris, vagina and cervix, the area of ​​the brain called the sensory cortex is activated. That is, the brain interprets different sensations when stimulating the clitoris, cervix and vaginal walls. This makes the G-Spot menajdi famous.

I think that most evidence suggests that the G-spot is not a particular structure. It's like saying, 'whether it is the thyroid gland?', G-spot is more like a concept such as the city of New York. G-spot is a matter, an area, meeting variety of different structures.

Komisaruk said that the pressure sensitive part is called the G-spot is also pressing the urethra and a structure called the Skene's glands, similar to the prostate gland of men.

Each body part has a different nerve. I think there are enough good data to explain a lot of women feel that the area is a very sensitive area.

That the vagina, clitoris and urethra may act as a 'complex clitoris' during sex. Every time from one of the parts are moved or stimulated, can move and stimulate other parts.

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