A gynecologist from Florida says he’s finally located the semi-mythical G-spot, an erogenous zone on the front wall of the vagina.
It was first ‘discovered’ by German doctor Ernst Grafenberg back in 1950, but has proved elusive ever since.
Now, though, Dr Adam Ostrzenski of the Institute of Gynecology in St Petersburg says he’s found it during the dissection of an 83-year-old woman, and chopped it out for a closer look.
“The dissection established the presence of the G-spot, a well-delineated sac structure located on the dorsal (back) perineal membrane, 16.5 mm from the upper part of the urethral meatus, creating a 35 degree angle with the lateral (side) border of the urethra,” he reports (just love that sexy talk, don’t you?).
“Having 3 distinct regions, the G-spot emerged with dimensions of length of 8.1 mm x width 3.6 mm to 1.5 mm x height 0.4 mm. Upon removal of the entire structure with the adjacent margin tissues, the G-spot stretched from 8.1 to 33 mm.”
Other investigations, though, have failed to find anything of the sort. Just a couple of months ago, researchers from the Yale-New Haven Hospital in Connecticut had a good rummage about and found that the evidence was inconclusive at best.
And a survey of hundreds of women twins who – purely in the spirit of scientific endeavor, you understand – attempted to find it for themselves found no evidence at all.
Ostrzenski thinks his discovery will ‘lead to a better understanding and improvement of female sexual function’. We think people shouldn’t run until they can walk.