The shocking new discovery about women’s orgasms

There’s an innovative solution in the works for women who struggle to achieve orgasm, but it’s not as simple as popping a little blue pill.

New research suggests that a form of therapy involving weekly stimulation with electrodes can make the female climax easier to come by. In a pilot study published in journal Neuromodulation, nine women were zapped in sessions over 12 weeks, and eight reported improvements in sexual arousal and orgasm.

“It worked for me,” one pleased participant said in a statement to the university. “I’m not 100 percent back to the way I was, but I can have orgasms again, and they are pretty good ones.”

To conduct the experiment, scientists had women sit through half-hour zaps of peripheral nerves near the genital region or ankle. One 53-year-old volunteer described the feeling to researchers as a “bizarre, pressure vibration sensation.”

Though the results didn’t always last beyond the experiment window, the findings could be a game changer for women with female sexual dysfunction, a condition marked by persistent lack of libido that affects an estimated 40 percent of women.

Future studies will control for the placebo effect. But the same research team found in earlier studies that by stimulating the nerves in the genital and ankle region of rats, the rodents experienced “a strong increase in vaginal blood flow.”

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