Sex in an MRI scanner — a look back at one of the most popular BMJ articles of all time

This Christmas marks the 20th anniversary of the publication of “Magnetic resonance imaging of male and female genitals during coitus and female sexual arousal” in

The BMJ

.

In its first year, it picked up the IgNobel prize for medicine, and has since become one of the most downloaded BMJ articles of all time.

Dr Tony Delamothe, a former editor at

The BMJ

, ponders on its success.

Despite some setbacks (reluctance by hospital officials; “sniffing press hounds” and some problems with sexual performance), the researchers were able to achieve good images of coitus in progress.

The main findings, based on 13 experiments performed with eight couples and three single women, were that during intercourse in the “missionary position” the penis is neither straight nor “S” shaped as had been previously thought, but is, in fact, the shape of a boomerang.

What’s more, during female sexual arousal the size of the uterus does not increase, as had been previously reported.

The researchers concluded that taking magnetic resonance images (MRIs) of the male and female genitals during sexual intercourse is feasible and adds to our knowledge of anatomy.

At the time, nobody at

The BMJ

thought the study was particularly useful clinically or scientifically, but it contained “a striking image using a new technology, and everyone agreed that readers might be interested to see it,” writes Delamothe.

It was hardly the medical equivalent of a moon landing, so why did “lay” visitors come flocking in such numbers?

He suggests that the prospect of seeing coitus on screen (for free) was the attraction, even if all that was on offer was a series of black and white still photographs.

“If that’s the explanation, it’s hard to think ourselves back to such an innocent age, given today’s explicit online offerings,” he says. Nevertheless, the “sniffing press hounds” have kept interest alive these past 20 years, regularly rediscovering the original paper and sending new generations to it.

He points out that the IgNobel awards are given to articles that make you smile, then think. How much thinking this article has occasioned since publication is moot, he writes. But it is still making people smile (and laugh), much to the annoyance of author and participant Professor Ida Sabelis.

She despairs that friends, family, and even colleagues at VU University in Amsterdam – one of the world’s most progressive cities – still find the study amusing.

“Why that’s the case, 20 years after the article’s original publication, is worth a study of its own,” concludes Delamothe.

###

Peer-reviewed? No

Type of evidence: Observational; Opinion

Subject: Christmas 1999 article

This part of information is sourced from https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-12/b-sia121619.php

BMJ Media Relations
44-020-365-55021
[email protected]
http://www.bmj.com 

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