Recently, North Carolina State University in the United States conducted a survey of more than 300 unmarried women, and found that most of the respondents had premarital sex before and after menstruation, at which time the probability of orgasm was also high. The report also pointed out that the time when married women reach orgasm is mostly concentrated around the onset of menstruation.
In fact, this topic has already attracted the attention of the scientific community. In the 1920s, Maris Topps, a female scientist at the University of London in the UK, conducted long-term and in-depth observation and research on this issue. She found that in every 28 day menstrual cycle in women, there are generally two sexual desire peaks, one before the onset of menstruation and the other two to three days before and after ovulation. The two peaks are generally 14 days apart, each lasting about 3 days. The strength of sexual desire between these two time periods may vary slightly due to factors such as desire and fatigue.
Although domestic scholars have not conducted a survey on the sexual desire fluctuations of Chinese women during the menstrual cycle, they also believe that women may indeed have such cycles. The peak of sexual desire during ovulation may be related to instincts that are conducive to fertility; The peak of sexual desire before menstruation may be related to the desire to ensure the safety of sexual life.
There is a viewpoint that this sexual desire change in women is related to the regular secretion of estrogen and progesterone during the menstrual cycle. As the follicles mature, estrogen secretion continuously increases and forms a peak before ovulation, thereby inducing a peak in sexual desire. However, there are also views that in the process of biological evolution, the more advanced the development, the weaker the influence of sex hormones on sexual behavior.
But there is a consensus in the scientific community that women's sexual desire fluctuations are influenced by multiple factors, such as physiology, psychology, emotions, environment, partners, etc. Therefore, Yang Dazhong stated that in real life, the two sexual desire peaks mentioned above are not universally applicable, with some women being exceptions as their sexual desire is stronger during menstruation.
If a woman has a high sexual demand during the "peak" period, she will naturally perceive it and reflect it in her sexual life. Therefore, doctors rarely remind women in clinical practice to use sexual desire peaks to improve their quality of sexual life. But for men, this is a wake-up call: quickly find out the desire cycle of your partner, then adjust yourself, try to "climb the top" with your partner, and achieve "win-win".