Women can get climax through intercourse only

Written By Prety ngel on Tuesday, April 17, 2012 | 2:00 AM


It was said for decades that, women get sexual satisfaction only through clitoris but this is made false now by the new study.

Surprised? Yes this is true that if you are thinking that you can give maximum satisfaction to your women through clitoris only during intercourse, think differently now.

The research shows that not only can women climax through sexual intercourse alone, but the resulting orgasm is wildly different to those reached by clitoral stimulation.


The new conclusions will clang with many who have found that there is more than one way to satisfy a woman in bed.

Scientists have found that vaginal and clitoral orgasms are completely separate phenomena and activate different areas of the brain.

The sensational new evidence is included in a series of essays published last month in the Journal of Sexual Medicine. 

Other surprising findings cited by the essays in the series include:

  1. Women are not only be able to orgasm from both vaginal and clitoral stimulation, but from stimulation at a range of erogenous zones, with some able to even 'think' themselves to a peak;
  2. The sensitive G-spot - once thought of as a semi-mythical orgasm hot spot - could have a role in pain relief during labour by more than doubling a woman's pain threshold;
  3. The ability to reach climax through vaginal stimulation could be linked to both physical and mental health, with healthy women more likely to orgasm without clitoral stimulation.


French gynaecologist Odile Buisson in her essay argues the case for the classic understanding of the female orgasm as dependent on clitoral stimulation.
According to this view, the front wall of the vagina is closely linked with the internal parts of the clitoris, meaning that stimulating the vagina without activating the clitoris ought to be impossible.

So, she concludes, so-called 'vaginal' orgasms could in reality be clitoral orgasms by another name.

New Jersey based researchers at Rutgers University conducted multiple studies in which they asked women to masturbate while having their brains scanned with a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) machine.


Barry Komisaruk, professor of psychology at Rutgers, reported that the brain areas for clitoral, cervical and vaginal stimulation do cluster together but they overlap only slightly, like a 'cluster of grapes'.


'If the vagina stimulation is simply working via clitoral stimulations, then vaginal stimulation and clitoral stimulation should activate the exact same place in the sensory cortex,' Professor Komisaruk told LiveScience. 'But they don't.'
Other evidence presented backs up the hypothesis that there are multiple different kinds of female orgasms.


Furthermore, there is evidence that some women can bring themselves to a sexual peak merely by thinking about it with no sexual stimulation at all.

However, the most provocative finding included in the Journal of Sexual Medecine claims that vaginal-only orgasms are less likely in women with poor physical and mental health.

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