US gynaecologist claims he’s found actual G-spot
A cosmetic gynaecologist in America claims to have found the G-spot while dissecting a cadaver of a recently-deceased 83-year-old woman. The erogenous zone believed to cause intense vaginal orgasms when stimulated has been discussed heavily since the term was coined back in 1982 but there has never been any anatomical evidence.
Now Dr Ostrzenski described the structure and size of a bean-shaped tissue next to the female urethra in his paper titled “G-Spot Anatomy: A New Discovery” published in Journal of Sexual Medicine. Ostrzenski, the lone author of the paper, defined a well-defined 8X4 mm “sac with walls” and a tail emerging from it. Inside the sac he found “blue grape-like anatomic compositions” resembling the erectile tissue in a flaccid penis. The finding has met substantial criticism. Firstly, physiology experts argue that an organ supposedly with a specific function cannot be identified just by looking at it.
Operating on a cadaver can only tell you if the structure is there. What has been discovered could easily be a hematoma — swelling from clotted blood. Further on the paper itself, critics point at a 2008 paper that Dr Ostrzenski has referenced to provide a genetic basis behind the G-spot. It talks about a GGGG sequence, also named “G-spot” that causes gene chips to give incorrect results; it has nothing to with the female sexual anatomy.
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