Scanners Help Determine What Pleases Women (AP)
<p><a href="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/health/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050906/ap_on_he_me/women_s_viagra"><img src="http://us.news3.yimg.com/us.i2.yimg.com/p/ap/20050906/capt.njme30109060013.womens_viagra_njme301.jpg?x=130&y=86&sig=vxweziaeXOii8xvBhf.yNQ--" align="left" height="86" width="130" alt="Barry Komisaruk, director of the Minority Biomedical Research Support Program at Rutgers University, and Wen-Ching Liu, professor of Radiology, right, use an actual human brain, that has been preserved and sliced, to talk about sexual responses in the brain as they sit in an office at UMDNJ Hospital in Newark, N.J., Thursday, Sept. 1, 2005. Using increasingly powerful brain scanners to watch what women's brains do when they have orgasms, researchers like Komisaruk and Liu are showing that the best way to satisfy a woman is through her mind. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)" border="0" /></a>AP - Drug companies make $2.5 billion a year selling Viagra, Cialis and Levitra to help men enjoy sex. Since more women suffer from sexual dysfunction than men, developing a drug that could double those sales would seem to be a no-brainer.</p><br clear=all>
Read more...