The G-spot exists and you have it too! (maybe you just don't know how to stimulate it...)
Does the “G-spot” exist? Yes! But it's not a spot...
Does the famous G-spot exist or maybe not?
The point is that it’s not a spot, in fact it’s more correct to talk about the "Cuv zone", which stands for “clitoro-urethro-vaginal complex”.
According to Emmanuele Jannini, professor of endocrinology and sexology at the University of Tor Vergata in Rome, “In the world of female sexuality, the G-spot has so far created more debates than science, while the goal is to understand, from a scientific point of view, why a woman feels pleasure when stimulated in certain areas.”
What is the Cuv zone
Jannini explains in a study published in the authoritative scientific journal Nature Reviews Urology that the Cuv zone includes the clitoris, the urethra, and the anterior wall of the vagina, and all these parts communicate with each other during sexual activity and the tissues are extremely dynamic.
Another interesting point is that their reaction to stimulation can be different each time, depending on hormonal status. Jannini states that it is well known that genital tissues are hormone-dependent and this becomes even clearer during menopause, a phase of the biological cycle that involves a profound physiological change in the vagina. However, the goal is to understand how hormone levels interfere with the ability to feel pleasure.

The difference is woman
Jannini and colleagues put together data from other research conducted over ten years, analyzing the genital anatomy of deceased women and men, and found that while men are basically all the same, women were all different. They also identified in the female body a structure similar to the prostate that plays an active role in achieving female pleasure and is part of the Cuv zone. With the aim of describing what happens in this Cuv area during sexual activity, they performed ultrasounds on women both during self-stimulation and during intercourse: during vaginal orgasm, the entire area is widely involved.
The Cuv zone in the brain
The Cuv zone, as extensive and complex as it is, is not the only thing that determines pleasure and female sexuality; in fact, the brain plays a very important role. “An anatomical area of female pleasure exists and I believe that women's emancipation also passes through knowledge of it”, says the expert.
Let's not forget affection
Psychology and medicine fundamentally agree that “female sexuality is made up of symbols, scenarios, and imagination, which are very sophisticated and precise aspects,” comments Stefania Andreoli, psychotherapist of the Order of Psychologists of Lombardy.
Pleasure and affection go hand in hand, which is why we should reflect on the importance of educating young people about affection.







