The female G-spot remains a "mythical location", experts say, after an extensive literature trawl failed to definitively prove its existence.
Reviewing 60 years’ worth of studies on the topic, a team of US and Israeli neurourologists concluded there was no objective, reliable way to identify an "anatomically distinct" female G-spot.
However they said the search should continue, given the multitude of anecdotal reports of a highly sensitive area in the distal anterior vaginal wall.
"Whether the G-spot actually exists is probably less interesting than the search and desire for its existence," the researchers wrote in the Journal of Sexual Medicine.
"The possibility that there may, in fact, be more than one genital focus of erotic arousal in women is sexually liberating, in...
The content on this site is available to Australian Registered Health Practitioners only. Please login or register for access.