G-Shot Could Inject The Sizzle Back Into Your Sex Life
ATLANTA -- It's the climax every woman desires."Isn't it the goal?" asked Heide Bailey. "It really is the prize, right?"We're talking about the big "O.""Everybody's aiming for the finish line," said Jackie, who didn't want to reveal her last name.Forget faking an orgasm and consider trying the G-Shot. It's a shot of collagen that's injected into an area of the anterior vaginal wall, known as the G-spot, to amplify it.Dr. Robert Moore says the shot of FDA-approved collagen can enlarge a woman's G-spot and inject the sizzle back into her sex life."It's going to bulk it up a little bit, it's going to make it more prominent, it's going to be easier to find for the patient, and/or her partner," said Moore, a urogynecologist at the Atlanta Vaginal Rejuvenation and Cosmetic Surgery Center.Wondering if it works? Just ask Heide Bailey."I tell you, a couple days after, it was fascinating. You know, it just put a new excitement in me," she said.Bailey got the G-Shot after a hysterectomy caused her sex drive to nose dive."Everything kind of just bottomed out," she said.Now, Bailey says all systems are go. "I'm wearing him out," she said, referring to her husband.But, before you get the shot, you have to find the spot. And, contrary to popular belief, Moore said the G-spot is not a myth.This mysterious, erogenous zone is located along the anterior vaginal wall, about two to three centimeters inside the vaginal opening, near the bladder neck.Jackie says at 45, her orgasms aren't as intense as they used to be."They just weren't the same as when you're 25, you know, everything's changing," she said. She's hoping the G-Shot will take things up a notch.But beware -- the shot is about 75 percent effective, which means it may not work for everyone, and results don't last forever."Collagen gets degraded and it goes away after a period of three to six months," Moore said.And while the shot is considered safe, it isn't cheap -- about $1,200 a pop.But some say you can't put a price tag on great sex."If it's worth it, it might be something my husband wants to fit into the budget," Jackie said.It sounds painful, but Moore uses local anesthetic to dull the sting.If the shot works, women can be reinjected, again and again, once the effects wear off.But, as with any procedure, there are risks which include infection, bleeding or allergic reaction, although Moore says negative side effects are rare.
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