Sexual dysfunction
Template:DiseaseDisorder infobox
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Kiran Singh, M.D. [2] Shakiba Hassanzadeh, MD[3]
Overview
Sexual dysfunction or sexual malfunction (see also sexual function) is difficulty during any stage of the sexual act (which includes desire, arousal, orgasm, and resolution) that prevents the individual or couple from enjoying sexual activity.
Onset
Emotional factors affecting sex include both interpersonal problems (such as marital/relationship problems, or lack of trust and open communication between partners) and psychological problems within the individual (depression, sexual fears or guilt, past sexual trauma, sexual disorders,[1] and so on).
Physical factors include drugs (alcohol, nicotine, narcotics, stimulants, antihypertensives, antihistamines, and some psychotherapeutic drugs); injuries to the back, problems with an enlarged prostate gland, problems with blood supply, nerve damage (as in spinal cord injuries); or disease (diabetic neuropathy, multiple sclerosis, tumors, and, rarely, tertiary syphilis); failure of various organ systems (such as the heart and lungs); endocrine disorders (thyroid, pituitary, or adrenal gland problems); hormonal deficiencies (low testosterone, estrogen, or androgens); and some birth defects.
Classification
Sexual dysfunction disorders are generally classified into four categories: sexual desire disorders, sexual arousal disorders, orgasm disorders, and sexual pain disorders.
- Sexual desire disorders or decreased libido can be caused by a decrease in normal estrogen (in women) or testosterone (in both men and women) production. Other causes may be aging, fatigue, pregnancy, medications (such as the SSRIs) or psychiatric conditions, such as depression and anxiety. Loss of libido from SSRIs usually reverses after SSRIs are discontinued, but in some cases it does not. This is known as PSSD.
- Sexual arousal disorders were previously known as frigidity in women and impotence in men, though these have now been replaced with less judgmental terms. Impotence is now known as erectile dysfunction, and frigidity has been replaced with a number of terms describing specific problems with, for example, desire or arousal.
For both men and women, these conditions can manifest as an aversion to, and avoidance of, sexual contact with a partner. In men, there may be partial or complete failure to attain or maintain an erection, or a lack of sexual excitement and pleasure in sexual activity.
There may be medical causes to these disorders, such as decreased blood flow or lack of vaginal lubrication. Chronic disease can also contribute, as well as the nature of the relationship between the partners. As the success of sildenafil (Viagra) attests, most erectile disorders in men are primarily physical, not psychological conditions. - Orgasm disorders are a persistent delay or absence of orgasm following a normal sexual excitement phase. The disorder can occur in both women and men. Again, the SSRI antidepressants are frequent culprits -- these can delay the achievement of orgasm or eliminate it entirely.
- Sexual pain disorders affect women almost exclusively and are known as dyspareunia (painful intercourse) and vaginismus (an involuntary spasm of the muscles of the vaginal wall that interferes with intercourse). Dyspareunia may be caused by insufficient lubrication (vaginal dryness) in women.
Poor lubrication may result from insufficient excitement and stimulation, or from hormonal changes caused by menopause, pregnancy, or breast-feeding. Irritation from contraceptive creams and foams can also cause dryness, as can fear and anxiety about sex.
It is unclear exactly what causes vaginismus, but it is thought that past sexual trauma (such as rape or abuse) may play a role. Another female sexual pain disorder is called vulvodynia or vulvar vestibulitis. In this condition, women experience burning pain during sex which seems to be related to problems with the skin in the vulvar and vaginal areas. The cause is unknown.
Sexual dysfunctions are more common in the early adult years, with the majority of people seeking care for such conditions during their late twenties through thirties. The incidence increases again in the geriatric population, typically with gradual onset of symptoms that are associated most commonly with medical causes of sexual dysfunction.
Sexual dysfunction is more common in people who abuse alcohol and drugs. It is also more likely in people suffering from diabetes and degenerative neurological disorders. Ongoing psychological problems, difficulty maintaining relationships or chronic disharmony with the current sexual partner can also interfere with sexual function.
Differential Diagnosis of Male Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder
- Another medical condition
- Central nervous system disease
- Diabetes mellitus
- Hypogonadism
- Thyroid dysfunction
- lnterpersonal factors
- Severe relationship distress
- Nonsexual mental disorders
- Other sexual dysfunctions
- Substance/medication use[2]
Risk Factors of Male Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder
- Age
- Attitudes
- Alcohol
- Anxiety
- Emotional connection
- Hypogonadism
- Hyperprolactinemia
- Interpersonal problems
- Lack of adequate sex education
- Mood
- Man's feelings about himself
- Partner's sexual desire
- Social and cultural contextual factors
- Trauma from early life experiences[2]
Diagnosis
Symptoms
Psychological sexual disorders
The fourth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders lists the following psychological sexual disorders:
- Hypoactive sexual disorder (see also asexuality)
- Bestiality
- Sexual aversion disorder (avoidance of or lack of desire for sexual intercourse)
- Female sexual arousal disorder (failure of normal lubricating arousal response)
- Male erectile disorder
- Female orgasmic disorder (see Anorgasmia)
- Male orgasmic disorder (see Anorgasmia)
- Premature ejaculation
- Dyspareunia
- Vaginismus
- Secondary sexual dysfunction
- Paraphilias
- Gender identity disorder
- PTSD due to genital mutilation or childhood sexual abuse
Other sexual problems
- Sexual dissatisfaction (non-specific)
- Lack of sexual desire
- Anorgasmia
- Impotence
- Sexually transmitted diseases
- Delay or absence of ejaculation, despite adequate stimulation
- Inability to control timing of ejaculation
- Inability to relax vaginal muscles enough to allow intercourse
- Inadequate vaginal lubrication preceding and during intercourse
- Burning pain on the vulva or in the vagina with contact to those areas
- Unhappiness or confusion related to sexual orientation
- Transsexual and transgender people may have sexual problems (before or after surgery), though actually being transgendered or transsexual is not a sexual problem in itself.
- Persistent sexual arousal syndrome
- Post SSRI Sexual Dysfunction
- Sexual addiction
- Hypersexuality
- Female genital cutting has occurred more in the USA than previously thought
- Male circumcision alters the natural sexual function for both partners
Diagnostic Criteria
DSM-V Diagnostic Criteria for Male Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder [2]
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Clinical studies
Since people tend not to talk to one another about their sexual problems, many people imagine that they are "abnormal", or that their sexual problems are unique or shameful. Images of sexuality presented by society and the media often present people with unrealistic ideals of sexual behavior, whether of the ideals of chastity and sexual fidelity presented by religion, or the ideal of sexual inexhaustibility and promiscuous availability presented by pornography. Neither image appears to be representative of human behavior in real life: this has been summed up in the phrase "everyone lies about sex".
The earliest attempts at treating sexual dysfunctions, especially erectile dysfunction, date back to Muslim physicians and pharmacists in the medieval Islamic world. They were the first to prescribe medication for the treatment of this problem, and they developed several methods of therapy for this issue, including a single-drug therapy method where a drug was prescribed and a "combination method of either a drug or food." Most of these drugs were oral medication, though a few patients were also treated through topical and transurethral means. Sexual dysfunctions were being treated with clinically tested drugs in the Islamic world since the 9th century until the 16th century by a number of Muslim physicians and pharmacists, including Muhammad ibn Zakarīya Rāzi, Thabit bin Qurra, Ibn Al-Jazzar, Avicenna (The Canon of Medicine), Averroes, Ibn al-Baitar, and Ibn al-Nafis (The Comprehensive Book on Medicine).[3]
In modern times, the genuine clinical study of sexual problems is usually dated back no further than 1970 when Masters and Johnson's Human Sexual Inadequacy was published. It was the result of over a decade of work at the Reproductive Biology Research Foundation in St. Louis, involving 790 cases. The work grew from Masters and Johnson's earlier Human Sexual Response (1966).
Prior to Masters and Johnson the clinical approach to sexual problems was largely derived from the thinking of Freud. It was held with psychopathology and approached with a certain pessimism regarding the chance of help or improvement. Sexual problems were merely symptoms of a deeper malaise and the diagnostic approach was from the psychopathological. There was little distinction between difficulties in function and variations nor between perversion and problems. Despite work by psychotherapists such as Balint sexual difficulties were crudely split into frigidity or impotence, terms which too soon acquired negative connotations in popular culture.
The achievement of Human Sexual Inadequacy was to move thinking from psychopathology to learning, only if a problem did not respond to educative treatment would psychopathological problems be considered. Also treatment was directed at couples, whereas before partners would be seen individually. Masters and Johnson saw that sex was a joint act. They believed that sexual communication was the key issue to sexual problems not the specifics of an individual problem. They also proposed co-therapy, a matching pair of therapists to the clients, arguing that a lone male therapist could not fully comprehend female difficulties and vice versa.
The basic Masters and Johnson treatment program was an intensive two week program to develop efficient sexual communication. Couple-based and therapist led the program began with discussion and then sensate focus between the couple to develop shared experiences. From the experiences specific difficulties could be determined and approached with a specific therapy. In a limited number of male only cases (41) Masters and Johnson had developed the use of a female surrogate, an approach they soon abandoned over the ethical, legal and other problems it raised.
In defining the range of sexual problems Masters and Johnson defined a boundary between dysfunction and deviations. Dysfunctions were transitory and experience by the majority of people, dysfunctions bounded male primary or secondary impotence, premature ejaculation, ejaculatory incompetence; female primary orgasmic dysfunction and situational orgasmic dysfunction; pain during intercourse (dyspareunia) and vaginismus. According to Masters and Johnson sexual arousal and climax are a normal physiological process of every functionally intact adult, but despite being autonomic it can be inhibited. Masters and Johnson treatment program for dysfunction was 81.1% successful.
Despite the work of Masters and Johnson the field in the US was quickly over-run by ethusiastic rather than systematic approaches, blurring the space between 'enrichment' and therapy. Although it has been argued that the impact of the work was such that it would be impossible to repeat such a clean experiment.
Overview
Historical Perspective
Classification
According to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 5 (DSM-5), the list of sexual dysfunctions include:[4]
- Delayed ejaculation
- Erectile disorder
- Female orgasmic disorder
- Female sexual interest/arousal disorder
- Genito-pelvic pain/penetration disorder
- Male hypoactive sexual desire disorder
- Premature (early) ejaculation
- Substance/medication induced sexual dysfunction
- Other specified sexual dysfunction
- Unspecified sexual dysfunction.
Pathophysiology
Causes
Differentiating Sexual Dysfunction from other Diseases
Epidemiology and Demographics
Prevalence
The US National Health and Social Life Survey (NHSLS) showed that the prevalence of sexual problems among the individuals in the US include:[5]
Women
- The prevalence of sexual complaints is approximately 43% and the most common problems include:
- Desire (33%)
- Orgasm (24%)
- Lubrication (19%)
Men
- The prevalence of sexual complaints is approximately 31% and the most common problems include:
- Premature ejaculation (21%)
- Erectile dysfunction (5%)
- Low desire (5%)
Risk Factors
According to a consensus statement from the 4th International Consultation on Sexual Medicine in 2015, the risk factors of sexual dysfunction include:[6]
Risk Factors for Women
- Biological factors:
- Poor health
- Lower levels of physical activities
- Diabetes Mellitus (DM)
- Hypertension
- Antihypertensive drugs
- Chronic diseases:
- Stress urinary incontinence
- Urinary tract symptoms
- Hysterectomy
- Female genital mutilation or cutting
- Psychological and psychiatric factors:
- Sociocultural factors:
- History of sexual abuse
- Emotional and physical abuse during childhood
- Sexual dysfunctions in the male partner
- Low education
- Stress at work or unemployment
- Substance abuse (alcohol, tobacco, and opioids)
Risk Factors For Men
- Biological factors:
- Poor health
- Age
- Diabetes Mellitus (DM)
- Obesity, metabolic syndrome, and erectile dysfunction (ED)
- Cardiovascular disease and hypertension
- Smoking or other tobacco use
- Hormonal or endocrine factors
- Urinary tract diseases and lower urinary tract symptoms
- Other chronic diseases:
- Surgery and trauma:
- Psychological and psychiatric factors:
- Medications and recreational drugs:
- Cardiovascular, hormonal, anticholinergic, cytotoxic, and psychotropic drugs
- Alcohol, marijuana, and narcotics
- Anxiety and depression
- Medications and recreational drugs:
- Sociocultural factors:
- Early childhood experiences
- Lack of physical activity
- Not being married
- Sexual problems in the partner
- Unemployment
- Lower level of education
Screening
Natural History, Complications, and Prognosis
Diagnosis
Diagnostic Study of Choice
- DSM-5 is used to diagnose different types of sexual dysfunction.[4]
- According to DSM-5, sexual dysfunction is a group of disorders that cause clinical impairment in the ability to respond sexually or experience sexual pleasure. Most disorders are diagnosed with persisted symptoms for at least 6 months on least 75% of sexual occassions.[4]
History and Symptoms
Physical Examination
Physical Examination
Electrocardiogram
X-ray
Echocardiography or Ultrasound
CT scan
MRI
Other Imaging Findings
Other Diagnostic Studies
Treatment
Medical Therapy
Surgery
Primary Prevention
Secondary Prevention
See also
- Sexual function for information about assessing sexual dysfunction
- Sexual arousal disorder
- Female sexual arousal disorder
- Post SSRI Sexual Dysfunction
- Agony aunt
- Anorgasmia
- Premature ejaculation
- Dapoxetine
- Sexless marriage
References
- ↑ Michetti, Paolo Maria (2006). "Male sexuality and regulation of emotions: a study on the association between alexithymia and erectile dysfunction (ED)". International Journal of Impotence Research. 18 (2): 170–174. PMID 16151475. Retrieved 2007-02-02. Unknown parameter
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ignored (help) - ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders : DSM-5. Washington, D.C: American Psychiatric Association. 2013. ISBN 0890425558.
- ↑ A. Al Dayela and N. al-Zuhair (2006), "Single drug therapy in the treatment of male sexual/erectile dysfunction in Islamic medicine", Urology 68 (1), p. 253-254.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders : DSM-5. Arlington, VA Washington, D.C: American Psychiatric Association,American Psychiatric Association. 2013. ISBN 0-89042-555-8. OCLC 830807378.
- ↑ Laumann EO, Paik A, Rosen RC (1999). "Sexual dysfunction in the United States: prevalence and predictors". JAMA. 281 (6): 537–44. doi:10.1001/jama.281.6.537. PMID 10022110.
- ↑ McCabe MP, Sharlip ID, Lewis R, Atalla E, Balon R, Fisher AD; et al. (2016). "Risk Factors for Sexual Dysfunction Among Women and Men: A Consensus Statement From the Fourth International Consultation on Sexual Medicine 2015". J Sex Med. 13 (2): 153–67. doi:10.1016/j.jsxm.2015.12.015. PMID 26953830.
Further reading
- Kaplan, Helen Singer, The New Sex Therapy: Active Treatment Of Sexual Dysfunctions, New York, Brunner/Mazel, 1974. ISBN 0876300832
External links
- NIH site on sexual problems
- 100 FAQs about sexual dysfunction
- Vaginimus Awareness Network: A non-profit site offering facts and advice to women with vaginismus, their partners and gynaecologists
- Sexual Dysfunction Research Community
- Traumatic Masturbatory Syndrome and other masturbation issues
- Sexual Medicine Society of North America's website: SexHealthMatters.org
- Persistent Sexual Arousal Syndrome - Language: Dutch and English
- Premature Ejaculation Self Help Treatment
- Dr. Ruth Westheimer on male sexual dysfunction
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