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Lost and found: The G-spot

Taylor Bigler Entertainment Editor
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It is one of the greatest unsolved mysteries of mankind’s past 60 years (besides who killed JFK and Tupac): Does the female “G-spot” exist? And if so, where the hell is it?

Since 1950, when German gynecologist Ernst Graefenber claimed he discovered the so-called G-spot — a highly sensitive area of the vagina that, when stimulated, gives some women intense orgasms — the search for the elusive anatomical gift was on.

The entire women’s magazine industry is based on finding it, and countless medical studies have attempted to prove — or disprove — the G-spot theory.

But now an American doctor — who we can clearly trust more than that Graefenber fellow — says he has confirmed the G-spot exists and he knows where it is, AFP reports.

In a study published Wednesday in the Journal of Sexual Medicine, Dr. Adam Ostrzenski said that he found a “well-delineated sac structure” inside an 83-year-old cadaver. Gross? Maybe. Important? Yes.

Ostrzenski says he plans to do more dissections and further study vaginal tissue to explain the G-spot phenomenon.

But other experts — and many boyfriends and husbands– say the G-spot does not exist, or that it exists in some women but not in others.

“The G-spot is not just a spot; it’s something much more complex,” Dr. Emmanuele Jannini, a professor of endocrinology and sexology in Italy, told Time. “Something is there. We may call it a G-spot or not — it doesn’t matter.”

It seems the science is still out, and the search is still on.

But just one more thing: Dr. Ostrzenski, if you’re reading this, could you please draw a detailed map and widely distribute it among the male population? That would be much appreciated. Thanks! Love, Women.

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Tags : sex
Taylor Bigler