It has evaded lovers for centuries, but in February we learned that the elusive and semi-mythical G spot had been captured on ultrasound for the first time. Emmanuele Jannini at the University of L'Aquila in Italy discovered clear anatomical differences between women who claim to have vaginal orgasms - triggered by stimulation of the front vaginal wall without any simultaneous stimulation of the clitoris - and those that don't. Apparently, the key is that women who orgasm during penetrative sex have a thicker area of tissue in the region between the vagina and urethra, meaning a simple scan could separate out the lucky "haves" from the "have-nots".
There's more to say. But, the Blogspot sensors of material to be reviewed by the censors might beep like a geiger counter! Go read it... Pooch Hound
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20026872.500-ecstasy-over-g-spot-therapy.html?DCMP=OTC-rss&nsref=life
G-spot does not exist.
ReplyDeleteJannini et al's article, published by Journal of Sexual Medicine, has been cited by mass-media all over the world, but how many journalists and women read the whole text of this article?
There are many scientific mistakes in Jannini's article:
- In Jannini's article there is no figure that shows a G-spot.
- In the same article Jannini write 3 definitions of G-spot and each one of them is incorrect.
- One vaginal orgasm at least once in the past month (in women that reported at least two acts of sexual intercourse per week) it is not a significant difference with women without vaginal orgasm, and Jannini write "the self-reported nature of presence or absence of vaginal orgasm is another strong limitation of our findings."!?
- Besides urethrovaginal space, clitoral bulbs, human clitoris-urethrovaginal complex, periurethral glans are not terms used in human anatomy. Also G-spot is not term used in human anatomy: Grafenberg, in 1950, has not discovered any spots, in his article he describes some cases of female and male urethral masturbation and the corpus spongiosum of the female urethra. Grafenberg writes that the intraurethral glands could only release fluids that is not urine during the orgasm: but he did not report an orgasm of intraurethral glands.
- Jannini write "However, our data cannot directly demonstrate that the thickness of an anatomical space may generate a mechanism that can be related to the creation of an orgasm." and "But, in conclusion, the results here presented allow us to speculate that there may be a functional correlation between the thickness of urethrovaginal space, or G-spot, and the ability to experience the vaginal orgasm": but sexologists should spread scientific notions and not speculations!
Jannini's article really has been overhauled and checked by the Reviewers selected by the Journal of Sexual Medicine?
G-spot does not exist: See video (with the original Grafenberg's article, etc.) in youtube.com/newsexology
Anonymous, thanks for your comment and the detail you provided. Note the comment I added to the original article.
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