Although the reasons for having sex  of any kind are varied and complex, reaching orgasm is usually the  goal. Because we're all so different, coming up with a universal  description of an orgasm is impossible. The one thing that most people  can agree on is that it's an incredibly, intensely pleasurable  experience.
So what is it? When in doubt, go to the dictionary.  The Oxford English Dictonary defines an orgasm as "a sudden movement,  spasm, contraction, or convulsion [...] a surge of sexual excitement."  Merriam-Webster gets more descriptive, stating that it's "an explosive  discharge of neuromuscular tensions at the height of sexual arousal that  is usually accompanied by the ejaculation of semen in the male and by  vaginal contractions in the female." The famous sex researcher Dr.  Alfred Kinsey once said that an orgasm "can be likened to the crescendo,  climax, and sudden stillness achieved by an orchestra of human emotions  ... an explosion of tensions, and to sneezing" [source: Geddes].
Dr.  Kinsey's comparison to sneezing might be debatable, but other than  that, all of these definitions are basically correct. They're just a few  of the many different attempts to describe exactly what it means to  have an orgasm.
Nearly every aspect of the orgasm -- what's  required to have one, why some people can't seem to achieve one, why we  have them at all -- has been the subject of much research and debate.  What happens to the body during an orgasm is pretty well-known, and it's  no surprise that the brain  plays a big part in reaching one. But researchers are still in the  process of figuring out exactly what's happening in the brain during an  orgasm. Let's start with looking at the messages that the body sends to  the brain.
Without nerves  sending impulses back to the spinal cord and brain, an orgasm wouldn't  be possible. Just like any other area of the body, the genitalia contain  different nerves that send information to the brain to tell it about  the sensation that's being experienced. This helps to explain why the  sensations are perceived differently depending on where someone is being  touched. A clitoral orgasm, for example, differs from a vaginal orgasm  because different sets of nerves are involved.
All of the  genitalia contain a huge number of nerve endings (the clitoris alone has  more than 8,000 of them), which are, in turn, connected to large nerves  that run up through the body to the spinal cord. (The exception is the vagus nerve,  which bypasses the spinal cord.) They perform many other functions in  the body in addition to providing the nerve supply, and therefore  feedback to the brain, during sexual stimulation. Here are the nerves  and their corresponding genital areas
- hypogastric nerve - transmits from the uterus and the cervix in women and from the prostate in men
 - pelvic nerve - transmits from the vagina and cervix in women and from the rectum in both sexes
 - pudendal nerve - transmits from the clitoris in women and from the scrotum and penis in men
 - vagus nerve - transmits from the cervix, uterus and vagina
 
The role of the vagus nerve in orgasms is a new discovery and there's  still much that's unknown about it; until recently, researchers didn't  know that it passed through the pelvic region at all.
Since most  of those nerves are associated with the spinal cord, it would stand to  reason that a person with a severed spinal cord wouldn't be able to have  an orgasm. And for a very long time, that's what people with these  types of injuries were told. 
However, recent studies show that people  with spinal cord injuries -- even parapalegics -- can reach orgasm. Dr.  Barry Komisaruk and Dr. Beverly Whipple of Rutgers University conducted a  study on women with severed spinal cords in 2004. 
They discovered that  these women could feel stimulation of their cervixes and even reach  orgasm, although there was no way their brain could be receiving  information from the hypogastric or pelvic nerves. How was this  possible? An MRI  scan of the women's brains showed that the region corresponding to  signals from the vagus nerve was active. Because the vagus bypasses the  spinal cord, the women were still able to feel cervical stimulation.
So  during sexual stimulation and orgasm, different areas of the brain  receive all of this information that lets it know exactly what's  happening -- and that what's happening is very enjoyable. But until  recently, we had no way of knowing exactly what was happening in the  brain at the exact moment of orgasm.
Pleasure Center of the Brain: Light It Up
You may have heard that the brain has a pleasure center  that lets us know when something is enjoyable and reinforces the desire  for us to perform the same pleasurable action again. This is also  called the reward circuit, which includes all kinds of pleasure, from sex to laughter to certain types of drug use. Some of the brain areas impacted by pleasure include:
- amygdala - regulates emotions
 - nucleus accumbens - controls the release of dopamine
 - ventral tegmental area (VTA) - actually releases the dopamine
 - cerebellum - controls muscle function
 - pituitary gland - releases beta-endorphins, which decrease pain; oxytocin, which increases feelings of trust; and vasopressin, which increases bonding
 
Although scientists have long been studying the pleasure center,  there hadn't been much research about how it relates to sexual pleasure,  especially in women.  In the late 1990s and the mid-2000s, a team of scientists at the  University of Groningen in the Netherlands conducted several studies of  both men and women  to determine brain activity during sexual stimulation. The team used  PET scans to illustrate the different areas of the brain that would  light up and shut off during sexual activity. In all of the tests, the  subjects were scanned while resting, while being sexually stimulated and  while having an orgasm.
Interestingly, they discovered that there aren't too many differences between men's and women's brains when it comes to sex. In both, the brain region behind the left eye, called the lateral orbitofrontal cortex,  shuts down during orgasm. Janniko R. Georgiadis, one of the  researchers, said, "It's the seat of reason and behavioral control. But  when you have an orgasm, you lose control" [source: LA Times].  Dr. Gert Holstege stated that the brain during an orgasm looks much  like the brain of a person taking heroin. He stated that "95 percent is  the same" [source: Science News].
There are some differences, however. When a woman has sex, a part of the brain stem called the periaqueductal gray (PAG)  is activated. The PAG controls the "flight or fight" response. Women's  brains also showed decreased activity in the amygdala and hippocampus,  which deal with fear  and anxiety. The team theorized that these differences existed because  women have more of a need to feel safe and relaxed in order to enjoy  sex. In addition, the area of the cortex associated with pain was  activated in women, which shows that there is a distinct connection  between pain and pleasure.
The studies also showed that although  women may be able to fool their partners into thinking they've had an  orgasm, their brains show the truth. When asked to fake an orgasm, the  women's brain activity increased in the cerebellum and other areas  related to controlling movement. The scans didn't show the same brain  activity of a woman during an actual orgasm.
But what about people who can't reach orgasm at all?
Neither Here Nor There: Anorgasmia and Non-genital Orgasms
In some cases, we know what causes anorgasmia (the  inability to reach orgasm). Drugs like Celexa, Zoloft and Paxil -- known  as SSRIs, or selective seratonin reuptake inhibitors -- are often used  to treat depression, anxiety and other mental illnesses. Like most drugs, however, they can have side effects. For some people, this includes sexual ones, including anorgasmia.
 But why? SSRIs can decrease the brain's production of dopamine,  the neurotransmitter that provides pleasurable feelings and reinforces a  person's desire to once again perform the action that brought him or  her pleasure. Sometimes the problem goes away on its own, or it can be  resolved by switching to a different antidepressant or taking another drug in addition to the SSRI. However, a small number of people experience post-SSRI sexual dysfunction (PSSD)  that lasts for days, weeks, months or even years after discontinuing  use of an SSRI. The cause of this dysfunction isn't understood, as  stopping the SSRI allows dopamine production to return to normal.
The  Dutch studies about orgasms (mentioned earlier), along with others,  have also been the basis for continuing research in helping women who  are anorgasmic. Dr. Barry Komisaruk at Rutgers University is currently  studying women who are anorgasmic and women who are constantly aroused  sexually but are unable to reach orgasm. The latter group of women were  each put in an MRI scanner where they could see their brain activity on a  monitor. Their brain scans showed that the brain thought they were in  fact constantly being sexually stimulated. The women then used imagery  and other neurofeedback exercises to calm their brains. Dr. Komisaruk  believes that anorgasmic women could also learn to read and react to  their brain activity to try to reach orgasm.
Perhaps more  unusual-sounding than orgasmia is the concept of orgasms that have  nothing to do with the genitalia at all. Some people can orgasm from  being touched in other places on the body, such as the nipples. In this  case, researchers believe that the sensations in the nipples are  transmitted to the same areas of the brain that receive information from  the genitals. However, people have also reported actually feeling  orgasms in other parts of their bodies, including their hands and feet.  Several people have even described having orgasms in limbs that were no  longer there
 One reason may be the layout of the cortical homunculus,  a map that shows how different places of the brain's sensory and motor  cortices correspond to the organs and limbs of the body. A person who  feels an orgasm in a phantom foot, for example, may have experienced a  remapping of the senses because the foot is located next to the genitals  in the homunculus. The foot is no longer there to provide sensation, so  the area for genital sensation took over the space.
Although we  now know more about how orgasms impact the brain than ever before,  there's still a lot that we don't know. For example, scientists are  still debating the evolutionary  reason behind the female orgasm. But it's probably safe to say that  most people aren't too concerned about the "why" -- they'd prefer to  focus on the whos, whats and whens of sex.
 by "environment clean generations" 






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