Point G does not exist?

Many women swear they have a G, but a recent review of 60 years of ' sex ' research shows that science hasn't really found this legendary G point.

Scientists have used scans, surveys and biopsies with many women, all aiming to locate the area that is thought to cause vaginal orgasm, or another name G However, after reviewing the 96 published studies on this issue, an American and Israeli research team came to a conclusion:

'No doubt, point G does not exist , ' said Dr. Amichai Kilchevsky of Yale-New Haven Hospital in the Journal of Sexual Medicine. He is also the main author of the study.

'Although this conclusion is not 100% certain, it means that one day, maybe science will still find something that we missed, but they will need to have very technology. new ' , Dr. Kilchevsky expressed.

Picture 1 of Point G does not exist?

The conquest of 60 years

Point G is named in honor of the late Doctor Ernst Grafenberg, who described a particularly sensitive area, only 1-2cm wide in the vaginal wall. Grafenberg's description pulled Western medicine into a search race for more than half a century to identify and learn more about G.

But according to LiveScience , Grafenberg is not the first to write about such a sensitive area. The book Kamasasta and Javamangala of the 11th century Indians once described the area.

Recent surveys show that most women believe that point G actually exists, although many people admit they cannot locate it. Even studies that find physical evidence of the existence of point G are not successful, biopsy of tissue taken from the vaginal wall is true that the area has more nerve endings than the remaining areas of the vaginal wall, but the sensitivity of the human body is not in fact determined by the number of nerve endings.

In 2008, science used ultrasound images to explore the vaginal wall in women with vaginal orgasm and found that the area was said to have a thicker layer of tissue. In contrast, women who have never experienced vaginal orgasm will never have a thinner tissue layer.

'We hope our conclusions will motivate the spirit of women who cannot find point G. It is not that their bodies have problems, but simply that G does not exist.'