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Glossary G

 

Glands of Bartholin
The glands of Bartholin are two tiny ducts located on each side of the opening of the vagina. It is here that the mucus, which serves as the lubrication for intercourse, is produced upon stimulation.

Grafting
A procedure in which healthy skin and/or muscle is removed from one area of the body to another area damaged by disease or injury.

G-Spot
The Gräfenberg spot, or G-spot, is a small area in women behind the pubic bone, surrounding the urethra and accessible through the anterior wall of the vagina. It is putatively an erogenous zone that when stimulated leads to high levels of sexual arousal and powerful orgasms.
The term G-spot was coined by Addiego in 1981. It is named after the German gynaecologist Ernst Gräfenberg who is claimed to have first hypothesized the existence of such an area in 1950. The G-spot didn't enter public consciousness until a year later with the publication of the book “The G Spot and Other Recent Discoveries About Human Sexuality.”

G-Spot Aplification
(Also GSA, G-Spot Intensification, G-Spot Augmentation) is a simple, nonsurgical, physician-administered treatment that can augment the Grafenburg spot (G-Spot) in sexually active women with normal sexual function. Injection of autologous fat or hyaloronic acid enlarges the G-Spot.