There was a way to determine the G point

The mysterious G, the clue to the female orgasm, has long been a headache because it is impossible to determine exactly where it is. But now Italian scientists claim, it can be found by ultrasound.

The existence of point G has been controversial since the 1980s, when the term was born to explain why some women can get to the top by stimulating the vagina, while other women is not. The latest study by Dr. Emmanuele Jannini at the University of L'Aquila, Italy, consists of 20 women. The group used ultrasound to measure the size and shape of tissue in the upper vaginal wall, which is often thought to have a G point.

Of the 9 women who reported orgasm in the private area, the tissue between the vagina and the urethra was thicker in the other 11 women who could not reach the summit that way. Since then, the group concluded, women with G-points were when the tissue in the vagina was thicker than average.

Picture 1 of There was a way to determine the G point Dr Jannini stated: "For the first time we were able to use a simple, quick and inexpensive method to determine whether a woman had a G score."

However, Dr. Tim Spector at St Thomas Hospital in London, England, thinks that thicker tissue may be part of the clitoris - an extremely sensitive area.

Another hypothesis is that, instead of being the result of G, it is the climax that causes the muscular system to grow more in that region.

According to sexual psychologist Petra Boynton, at the University of London, England, there is no point in pointing out a woman who does not have a G.

"We are all different. Some women with intimate areas are extremely sensitive, and others are not, but they may be very strong in other areas. If a woman takes her whole life just to worry. if she has a G-score, she will forget about other things, and that's not the best way to get a satisfying sex life. "