What’s up with the G-Spot?
Posted on 23. Apr, 2008 by Dean Ramsden in Relationships
OK, first the good news: the G spot, named after Ernst Graefenberg, has been scientifically located by researcher Emmanuele Jannini, of the University of L’Aquila, Italy, after taking ultrasound scans of nine women who claimed to have experienced vaginal orgasms, and eleven who said they did not. The tissue of the G-spot, as most sexually-active individuals are aware, is noticeably thicker and has a different texture, on the front vaginal wall behind the urethra.
The bad news: not every woman has a G-spot, according to Jannini’s study. This only means that some women are restricted to clitoral orgasms (non-G spot women) and only G-spot women can attain vaginal orgasm.
More research is needed, say sex professionals, and a call has gone out for volunteers.
I know what you single men out there are thinking. “I knew it! It wasn’t me, after all!”
Before you ladies start sending the Italians feminist email rants about your sexual freedom, you might want to hold back a while. Let these people work. I just found out that this discovery was the side-product of a study going on to discover a “female Viagra”.
Apparently Viagra-like medications can affect female Skene glands and their level of PDE 5 (which research has shown accumulates around the G-spot), but if you don’t have a G-spot, the medication doesn’t work. Bad break, Pfizer.
So, what’s coming in the future, no pun intended? Well, the drug companies have recently created “Erectile Dysfunction” or “ED”, as a way to legally market their expensive drugs to men; look out for “Female Arousal Disorder” medications, no doubt making their debut soon. They just have to work out the science. Hopefully, they will do a better job than Eli Lilly did with Prozac.
I wonder if the new pill will be pink..


