The G Spot Produces Nitric Oxide

While I'm sure having scientific evidence for the G spot will reassure all those women who previously thought they were imagining their orgasms, what I really found interesting was this.

The elusive G spot really does exist, say researchers The Guardian

The research supports a previous study by the team which reported differences in the chemical make-up of the G spot tissues. Women who appear to have a G spot produced specific chemicals, including an enzyme that processes nitric oxide, the substance that triggers male erections.

That's a wonderful piece of biological feedback. Stimulating the G spot produces chemicals that trigger and (I presume) help maintain male erections. You gotta love nature.

The other interesting tidbit from the article (which goes a long way in explaining why it was a controversy in the first place) is that not only is this an easily recognizable area in the vagina, but some women have it, and some don't. So a quick examination can determine whether or not you are capable of having G spot orgasms.

(The article is safe for work, unless you count the gratuitous picture of Meg Ryan pretending to have an orgasm. I bet she just loves that picture.)

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This page contains a single entry by Kee Hinckley published on February 21, 2008 4:11 PM.

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I'm the CEO/CTO of Somewhere, Inc., a company building a unified social networking layer that gives people the means to track their friends across multiple social networks.
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