Want to protect against heart
attack, sleep better and ease your headache? Have more ORGASMS! Experts reveal
12 reasons climaxing is good for your HEALTH. After climax the 'love' hormone
oxytocin is released - promoting affection. Orgasm acts as a natural
anti-depressant as endorphins are released. It increases blood flow to the skin
resulting in a radiant post-coital glow. Women with heart disease have fewer orgasms,
according to one study. The earth seemingly shakes beneath you, your eyes glass
over and your body tingles with pleasure. While orgasms undoubtedly feel
amazing, they can also be good for you. From boosting immunity, inducing a
radiant glow to even protecting against heart disease, some doctors argue they
are essential for health, happiness and wellbeing, Healthista reports. Here, we
reveal 12 reasons why you should prioritize sexual pleasure...
‘AN ORGASM A DAY KEEPS THE DOCTOR AWAY’
That was the title of a leaflet
released to university students by the National Health Service claiming regular
sex and masturbation was as important to overall health as their
five-a-day. Needless to say, ‘family
groups’ were not impressed.
THE ONLY THING THAT STIMULATES A WOMAN'S BRAIN MORE IS A SEIZURE.
So found researchers late last
year when they caused a You Tube sensation by filming for the first time, the
female brain in the throes of orgasm. The video, taken with the help of an MRI
scanner and Nan Wise, a 54-year-old PhD student who stimulated herself ‘for my
dissertation,’ shows – lucky us – 80 pleasurable areas of the brain lighting up
during the orgasm. The evident fireworks start in the sensory cortex, the area
related to the genitals but then quickly spread through the limbic system,
involved in memory and emotion then finally, when orgasm arrives, causes the
greatest spark in the hypothalamus which releases the powerful, bonding 'love'
hormone, oxytocin.
THE COCAINE EFFECT
Few thrills rival orgasm, but
cocaine and indeed, winning truckloads of cash come close, says Dr David
Linden, New York neurologist and author of The Compass of Pleasure. Dr Linden
has scanned the brains of men, women, gay, straight and bi-sexual and found
similar results across all sexes and orientations. ‘There is a pleasure circuit
in the brain activated by orgasm,’ he says. The result is a surge in the
feel-good reward chemical dopamine in the brain, the same chemical active in
drug users pursuit of a fix. ‘It’s the reason sex and orgasm can become so
addictive,’ says Dr Linden. ‘Winning
money, drinking alcohol, taking cocaine, amphetamines and heroin all light up
the very same pleasure circuit.’
THE LOVE DRUG
That post-orgasmic love-bomb
feeling? It’s chemical too. Oxytocin is
a hormone that is released during childbirth and breast-feeding and after
orgasm it’s surging through both of your systems at high speed, underlying that
warm, lingering afterglow. Bottled, it’s really is a love drug. ‘If you give people oxytocin in nasal sprays
they are much more trusting and affectionate,’ says Dr Linden. But don’t be
fooled by myths about men not feeling lovey-dovey after orgasm. ‘The oxytocin
effect is the same in men and women,’ says Dr Linden. A cocktail of endorphins
are released post-coitally, which act as nature's anti-depressant
BEAT THE BLUES
A soaring sexual moon landing
beats the best anti-depressant drug there is. During orgasm, a cocktail of
endorphins – also known as the brain’s natural opiates – is released from the
brain including serotonin, the key ingredient in Prozac. Another hormone
release in the lead up to orgasm is prolactin, says Ashley Grossman, professor
of Endocrinology at the University of Oxford.
‘This is the hormone that is active in breast-feeding women and has an
overall calming effect.’ If you’re stressed before a meeting, you could do
worse than getting busy that morning. British researchers found that orgasms
could lower blood pressure and stress levels for up to two weeks after the
fact.
BETTER THAN VALIUM
It’s not only him that gets a
surge of sleepiness after a bout of horizontal folk-dancing. Evidence shows even a quickie could help you
sleep. The average female orgasm lasts just 25 seconds compared to 15 seconds
in men and one study on 2,632 US women found that 39 per cent of those who
masturbated did so in order to relax quickly. No wonder women with insomnia are
often advised to use a vibrator before bed.
STRENGTHENS THE IMMUNE SYSTEM
Forget echinacea and vitamin C,
more orgasms might result in fewer colds and flu. Having sex once or twice a
week has been linked with higher levels of Immunoglobulin A or IgA, an antibody
found in saliva and nasal linings that’s a factor in the immune system’s
ability to fight bugs.
FOR GLOWING SKIN
The most stellar anti-ageing
potion can’t beat that post-coital radiance.
Just ask Lady Gaga who last year credited ‘orgasms, lots of orgasms’ as
her skin secret. The post-sex glow is a real phenomenon in about 75 per cent of
women, says cosmetic dermatologist Dr Mervyn Patterson. ‘Orgasm causes increased blood flow to the
skin because it stimulates the parasympathetic nervous system, causing blood
vessels in the skin to open up, giving the face a flushed look,’ he said. This
effect is evident even if you’re not the one doing all the work and are simply
lying on your back, he explains. ‘Over time, regular orgasms can help the
carrying around of nutrients in the blood to the skin,' he said. But there’s
more. In the lead up to orgasm, your body releases bucket loads of DHEA, an
anti-ageing steroid hormone often sold in supplements and purported as the
fountain of youth. ‘This is your body’s way of making it naturally,’ he says. Stimulating
the G-spot increases a woman's pain threshold by 107 per cent
SORE HEAD? THIS WILL HELP, HONEST
You’ve curled up with a Jilly
Cooper having played the headache card and he is spooning you and telling you,
‘Honey, this will help.’ The man is clearly up on his scientific research. According
to Dr Beverly Whipple, the neurophysicist who discovered the G-spot in the late
seventies (for the record, it’s on the front wall of the vagina, 5cm from the
entrance), women who stimulated this area to orgasm increased their pain
threshold by 107 per cent. Plus, one
study of 83 women with migraine found that over half experienced relief from
pain after the big O.
FERTILITY BOOSTER
Of course, IVF proves babies can
be made without any sex at all. But according to two British biologists, Robin
Baker and Mark Bellis, having an orgasm might help baby-making along. The
intrepid researchers discovered what they termed the ‘upsuck theory’. That’s
when a woman climaxes any time between a minute to 45 minutes after her love
ejaculates, she retains significantly more sperm than she does after
non-orgasmic sex. ‘Though it’s not confirmed, the theory is that orgasm
produces rhythmic contractions of the uterus that pump the sperm up into it
making conception more likely,’ says Professor Grossman.
GOOD FOR THE HEART
‘If you don’t want to have a
heart attack, have an orgasm,’ is the advice of Dr Lisa Turner, Britain’s first
and only Orgasm Coach (yes, that’s a thing). ‘A study in Israel found that
women with higher incidence of heart disease had fewer orgasms and vice versa,’
she says. ‘People who have more orgasms feel better about themselves
generally.’ Having an orgasm might help baby-making along, experts say. If a
woman climaxes up to 45 minutes after her partner ejaculates, she retains
significantly more sperm than she does after non-orgasmic sex (file photo)
WHY HIGH HEELS CAN BE ORGASMIC
When shoe deity Christian
Louboutin claimed high heels could give you orgasms, he invited endless column
inches. From the sublime to the ridiculous, even reality TV sex siren Natasha
Giggs recently admitted to feeling hornier the moment she put on a pair of the
maestro’s creations. So, Italian urologist Dr Maria Cerruto set out to test the
theory on 66 women and found high heels ‘directly work the pleasure muscles
(pelvic floor) which are linked to orgasm'. Fact or just friction, we can’t be
certain but it’s definitely worth a shot – anything for new shoes.
(Mail Online)
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