The device helps women to 'top' with the button

While some women can easily enjoy a lot of orgasms in a day, others are struggling to "climb". To solve your hardship, a device helps bring orgasm just by pressing a button that has been patented in the United States.

The device is made in the form of a medical implant that can be controlled remotely and is smaller in size than a cigarette bag. It uses electrodes to trigger an orgasm.

The inventor Stuart Meloy, a surgeon at the Center for Anesthesia Counseling and Piedmont Pain (North Carolina, USA), hopes his device can be used to treat women with extreme disorders. love.

"Some women confuse sympathetic stimulation, such as increased heart rate, sweaty hands, nervous nerves, . with fear. So they want to get out of that situation." Jim Pfaus, an expert in the study of biological neurological characteristics of sexual behavior at Concordia University (Montreal, Canada), said.

Picture 1 of The device helps women to 'top' with the button
The figure depicts the structure of the device that helps bring artificial orgasm.(Photo: Daily Mail)

Although psychotherapy is now a popular treatment, Meloy's device can handle the disease more manually.

The patient will remain awake during surgery to install the implant. In it, the surgeon will have to correctly identify the nerves in the spinal cord to attach the electrodes. They will then connect to a transceiver that is smaller than a cigarette case, which can be implanted under the patient's buttock skin.

The principle of operation of the device is that the implant can be activated by a remote handheld controller, helping the woman "to the top" by pressing the button. Devices can even be programmed to help owners enjoy multiple orgasms every day or every week.

According to the inventor Meloy, the device will begin clinical trials this year. The doctor revealed that he had an idea about the device by accident.

Meloy said: "I am installing the electrodes, the female patient suddenly starts to moan. When I asked, she replied: 'You will have to teach my husband how to do it'".

Mr. Meloy has not yet tested the device in men, but thinks it can get the same result as " getting to the top" of the eyebrow. According to him, the use of new equipment should only be used for the most serious orgasmic disorders because of large intervention like a pacemaker.

Still, Dr. Pfaus said, the girls are now racing to "cutlery" to increase the size of the first round, despite the pain, they are more likely to be willing to tolerate interventional surgery to achieve orgasm easier.