Do men also have G-spots?

(Rich/Weird World)

If the existence of the so-called female G-spot is not a consensus, the male is defended by even fewer people. “The entire male sexual region is highly innervated, but there is no physiological proof of a point that concentrates more sensitivity than normal”, says urologist Sidney Glina. This is the position of most urologists, but many sexologists (who, in general, are not doctors) defend that men have an organ capable of producing uncontrollable pleasure when stimulated: the prostate, a gland located below the bladder, which, Together with the seminal vesicle, it produces semen. The only way to access the prostate is through the anus, just like urologists do with a digital rectal exam. The so-called G is a tribute to the German physician Ernest Gräfemberg, who, in 1950, published an article in the International Journal of Sexology reporting the discovery of a point the size of two beans, located in the upper part of the vagina, more or less 5 centimeters from the entrance, which, when stimulated, would cause great sexual pleasure. More than 30 years later, in 1982, the Americans Beverly Whipple and John Perry went deeper into the research and released the book G Spot and Other Discoveries about Human Sexualityin which, as it turns out, they name the region in honor of the German.