bra_man69
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A Texas company claims to have invented an electrical stimulation device that takes women to a pre-orgasmic state.
Stimulation Systems' says its Slightest Touch invention electrically stimulates sexual nerve pathways in a woman's pelvis, reports Wired News.
The £120 battery-powered device is designed to be used 10 to 20 minutes before sex and bring the wearer to a state of sexual readiness where the "slightest touch" can trigger an orgasm.
About the size of a Walkman, the Slightest Touch works via a pair of electrical pads attached to the ankles.
According to the company, the current stimulates two acupuncture points related to three nerve pathways in the pelvic region.
It was invented by accident when one of the four co-inventors, who are being kept anonymous, was trying to develop an electrical foot massager.
Using his girlfriend as a test subject, the prototype didn't do so much for her feet, but it did stimulate her sexually.
Company spokeswoman Cherisse Davidson said the device produced a "very gentle tingling sensation" in the lower ankle, and "butterflies" or "sparklers" in the pelvis.
"I prefer my sex with it," she said. "It intensifies the experience. The orgasms are more intense, they last longer and I usually have more than one."
However, Stephen Barrett, a retired psychiatrist, doubts the device works: "That's nuts. That's bullshit. You're not going to stimulate anything in the pelvis by stimulating the ankle," he said.
Stimulation Systems' says its Slightest Touch invention electrically stimulates sexual nerve pathways in a woman's pelvis, reports Wired News.
The £120 battery-powered device is designed to be used 10 to 20 minutes before sex and bring the wearer to a state of sexual readiness where the "slightest touch" can trigger an orgasm.
About the size of a Walkman, the Slightest Touch works via a pair of electrical pads attached to the ankles.
According to the company, the current stimulates two acupuncture points related to three nerve pathways in the pelvic region.
It was invented by accident when one of the four co-inventors, who are being kept anonymous, was trying to develop an electrical foot massager.
Using his girlfriend as a test subject, the prototype didn't do so much for her feet, but it did stimulate her sexually.
Company spokeswoman Cherisse Davidson said the device produced a "very gentle tingling sensation" in the lower ankle, and "butterflies" or "sparklers" in the pelvis.
"I prefer my sex with it," she said. "It intensifies the experience. The orgasms are more intense, they last longer and I usually have more than one."
However, Stephen Barrett, a retired psychiatrist, doubts the device works: "That's nuts. That's bullshit. You're not going to stimulate anything in the pelvis by stimulating the ankle," he said.