Sexual Side Effects of
Antidepressants Affect Men and Women Differently
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Psychiatry, Psychotropics and Female Sexuality
Psychiatric illnesses that affect sexual functioning and managing sexual
side-effects of psychiatric medications. Assistant Clinical Professor,
Department of Psychiatry, UCLA School of Medicine. From the 2002 Women's
Sexual Health Conference.
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Prozac and its pharmaceutical peers -- officially known as
selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs -- have been gaining a reputation
for inhibiting sexual desire. So, in 1998, when Lisa Piazza, M.D., of
Cornell University Medical College, placed a group of 25 depressed people on SSRls, the surprise was not that the sexual functioning of the men got
significantly worse -- but that of the
women significantly improved.
After six weeks of treatment, Piazza found that sexual desire,
psychological arousal, and overall sexual functioning improved for the
women, while ease of orgasm, satisfaction from orgasm, and
overall sexual
functioning deteriorated for the men.
Side effects from SSRI treatment may simply be less common in women, says
Piazza. She also points out that the women had greater sexual impairment
compared to the men at the beginning of the study, as a result of their
chronic depression. Their low starting point left ample room for
improvement.
Next: Many Women
Though Do Suffer Sexual Side Effects From Antidepressants
Last updated: 10/05
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