G-spot
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This article is about an organ in the female human body. For the Canadian television series, see G-Spot (TV series).
The Gräfenberg spot, or G-spot, is a small area in the genital area of women behind the pubic bone and surrounding the urethra.
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[edit] Stimulation
When this spot, located inside the vaginal wall, is stroked, there is a sensation or urge to urinate, but if the stroking is continued during sexual arousal it can be sexually pleasurable.<ref>Shibley Hyde, J. and DeLamater, J.D. (2003) Understanding Human Sexuality, Eighth Edition</ref>
For some women, it can be a primary source of stimulation leading to orgasm during intercourse while having sex in positions that use the penis to stimulate the frontal wall of the vagina. In such positions, it is usually the angle of penetration, so that the penis makes direct contact with the front of the vaginal wall, that induces this stimulation. [citation needed] Because of its hard to reach location and its role in sexual stimulation, some people employ g-spot vibrators for better stimulation.
[edit] Location
It was once believed to be a bundle of nerves in or around the vaginal walls but is now reported to be the same as, or part of, the urethral sponge (Heath, 1984), the site of Skene's glands, a homologue of the prostate that exists in many women believed to be the source of female ejaculation.
It is located on the anterior or frontal, side of the vagina, about half way between the pubic bone and cervix.
The G-spot may not be just one discrete spot. Some have contended that it is merely the deep nerves of the clitoris as they pass through the tissue to connect with the spinal column. The clitoris has deep roots and may in fact change in size and slightly change in location as hormone levels fluctuate throughout a woman's life.
[edit] Eponym
It is named after the German gynecologist Ernst Gräfenberg.
[edit] References
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[edit] External links
- Wallen, Kim, "An Annotated Bibliography on Sexual Arousal, Orgasm, and Female Ejaculation in Humans and Animals". Department of Psychology, Emory University. Atlanta, GA.
- Syed R (1999). "[Knowledge of the "Gräfenberg zone" and female ejaculation in ancient Indian sexual science. A medical history contribution]". Sudhoffs Arch 83 (2): 171-90. PMID 10705806.
- Darling C, Davidson J, Conway-Welch C (1990). "Female ejaculation: perceived origins, the Grafenberg spot/area, and sexual responsiveness.". Arch Sex Behav 19 (1): 29-47. PMID 2327894.
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