The last mystery uncovered. Destination: G-spot.
Doctor says he's found the actual G spot
To do so, Ostrzenski conducted a postmortem examination of an 83-year-old woman in Warsaw Medical University's Department of Forensic Medicine. Unlike the United States, which strictly regulates the research use of cadavers, Poland allows the dissection of human remains soon after death, when fine distinctions in tissue remain easy to see.
Inspecting the six distinct layers of tissue that make up a woman's vaginal wall, Ostrzenski said, he uncovered small, grape-like clusters of erectile tissue housed in a sac less than 1 centimeter across "a deep, deep structure" nestled between the vaginal wall's fifth layer, the endopelvic fascia, and its sixth, the dorsal perineal membrane.
The dissection took seven hours for the Poland-trained physician and anatomist, who said the first principles of medicine "first you have to establish the anatomy" prompted him to undertake the study. If confirmed by further investigation, he said, he hopes his finding will help rewrite female anatomy books.
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Others, however, are crying foul. Ostrzenski's report not only fails to support his grand claim of a "new discovery" but falls prey to the all-too-common urge to simplify women's sexuality, said Beverly Whipple, the Rutgers University sexologist who popularized the name "G spot" as coauthor of a 1982 book on the subject.
http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2012-04-25/health/la-he-g-spot-20120425_1_tissue-spot-beverly-whipple