Orgasm is full of mystery and desire. Recently, Mary Roach, the American author of “The Strange Combination of Science and Sex,” exhaustively reviewed the results of sexual science research over the last century and drew little-known conclusions about orgasm. This research was published in the latest issue of the American Journal of Medicine.
Orgasms can cause bad breath. Dutch researcher Theodore Hendrik van der Velde found that women can detect changes in their breathing about an hour after intercourse. This may be a slight change in digestive juices due to hormonal changes in the body caused by sex.
Orgasm can cure hiccups. A study published in the Canadian Medical Journal suggests that sex can help treat severe hiccups. This medical case has been documented many times, but its mechanism remains unclear.
Doctors have used orgasms in fertility treatments. In the last century, obstetricians and gynecologists adopted the aspiration theory, believing that when a woman reaches orgasm, muscle contractions can draw sperm into the cervix, allowing it to quickly reach the egg, increasing the chances of pregnancy. However, modern medical research does not support this theory.
Animal orgasms are more complicated than you might think. Animals don’t express their orgasms through facial expressions and words like humans do, and their orgasms are even more magical. For example, a pig’s orgasmic pleasure can last for 30 minutes, and a female ferret will die if she doesn’t mate.
Semen is ejaculated up to 8 feet during orgasm. The Alfred Kinsey Institute of Sexology calculated the average distance that semen is ejaculated. Dr. Kinsey selected 300 men and found that the furthest distance that men ejaculate during orgasm is 8 feet.
Orgasms also occur after death. Physiological science research shows that people also have orgasms after death. Some people’s brains are dead, but their hearts can still beat. If you touch them in the right place, their bodies can produce movements similar to the neurological movements that accompany an orgasm.
Fetuses can also climax in the womb. Male masturbation occurs first in the womb. A study published in the Journal of Ultrasound Medicine suggests that fetuses can achieve orgasmic pleasure in the womb through masturbation.