Orgasm
May Be Right-Brain Activity
Excerpt
By
Amy Norton, Reuters Health
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The unusual case of one woman with
epilepsy has led researchers to conclude that the right side of
the brain is probably home to the orgasm command center.
After a 31-year-old Hungarian epilepsy patient told her doctors
that she experienced orgasm-like feelings just before she had
a seizure, they decided to look into the phenomenon further. The
doctors were able to uncover 22 cases of this so-called ``orgasmic
aura'' preceding epileptic seizure reported in the medical literature
since 1945.
Nine of these patients had sufficient brain-activity records
for the researchers to zero in on the orgasmic brain spot. And
it appears to be somewhere in the right, or typically ''non-dominant,''
side of the brain--possibly in a region called the amygdala, which
is involved in emotional response.
Dr. Jozsef Janszky and colleagues at the National Institute of
Psychiatry and Neurology in Budapest report their findings in
the January issue of Neurology.
Janszky told Reuters Health that he decided to look into the
prevalence of orgasmic aura in epilepsy because until his patient
reported it, he had never heard of such a case.
``It is not a routine question in everyday epileptology practice,''
he noted.
In fact, Janszky said, his patient had kept the orgasmic experiences
to herself for 10 years before telling her doctors.
The researchers believe the brain area behind orgasmic aura also
underlies sexual orgasm. If so, Janszky said, further study into
the chemical features of the structures involved could lead to
a greater understanding of how orgasm arises.
``As orgasm is one of the most important things in human life,''
he added. ``I think (studying) its central mechanisms is interesting.''
SOURCE: Neurology 2002;58:302-304.
Reference
Source 89
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