Antidepressants
and Libido
Depression surrounds people with a life-draining cloud that
typically saps their joy, energy and desire for work, play, food and
sex.
Once recognized and properly treated, depression can usually be relieved,
restoring the zest for life and all it has to offer. Depression can be
lifted in two-thirds to three-fourths of patients by antidepressant
medications, including the SSRIs (serotonin-reuptake inhibitors) like
Lexapro,
Zoloft and
Paxil; tricyclics, like
Elavil and
Tofranil;
monoamine-oxidase
(MAO) inhibitors, like Nardil and Marplan.
But for many people treated with these and other psychiatric
drugs, the remedy, though highly effective in making life meaningful again,
falls short in a major sphere. Instead of raising libido and the ability to
achieve sexual fulfillment,
popular antidepressants commonly cause a loss of
interest in sex and block the ability to achieve sexual satisfaction.
As one 40-year-old man whose depression responded well to
medication told his psychiatrist, "I'm feeling much better and enjoying my
work again. But I'm having a problem at home."
If psychiatric drugs were taken like antibiotics, for 10
days or so, patients and their partners could easily cope with a temporary
disruption of their sex lives. But many chronically depressed people require
treatment for many months or years. For some, sexual crippling can be a
serious problem that prompts them to stop taking the drugs, often without
telling their doctors.
Yet, according to psychopharmacologists who spoke
at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association all the way
back in 1996, there are
less drastic solutions, including taking brief drug holidays and switching
to a new drug that seems to have little or no ill effect on sexuality.
Detecting Sexual Problems
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Women and Sexual Desire
A low
sex drive in women has been linked to hormones, and is often diagnosed
as a dysfunction. But what are the external factors that influence
sexual desire? What about stress, lack of self-esteem, or the
relationship a woman is in?Author of the book Reclaiming Your Sexual
Self, Kathryn Hall Ph.D., is the guest.
Listen with
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Physicians rarely hear about a vast majority of people whose
sex lives are disrupted by antidepressant drugs. Unless asked directly,
which experts say happens infrequently, patients rarely volunteer such
information. And unless the physician assesses the patient's sexual function
before prescribing medication, it may be impossible to tell whether the drug
has caused or contributed to sexual dysfunction.
Drug-related problems, which occur in women as often as in
men, may include decreased or lost libido;
inability to achieve an erection
or
ejaculation, and
delayed or blocked orgasm.
Dr. Robert T. Segraves, psychiatrist at Metrohealth Medical
Center in Cleveland, suggested that before prescribing a
medication that can have sexual side effects, the physician should inform
the patient that the drug "may cause sex problems, and thus we need to
establish a baseline of sexual functioning beforehand." He insists that when
patients are asked directly about sexual functioning, they usually give
honest answers. A "routine sexual history," Dr. Segraves said, should
include questions appropriate to the sex of the patient, like these:
-
Have you experienced any sexual difficulties?
-
Have you experienced any difficulty with lubrication?
-
Have you experienced any difficulty with erection?
-
Have you experienced any difficulty with orgasm?
-
Have you experienced any difficulty with ejaculation?
If the patient is reluctant or seems to give unreliable
answers, Dr. Segraves suggests that the patient's spouse or sex partner be
interviewed.
When, after weeks or months of therapy, the patient's
depression has lifted significantly, the presence of any sexual problems
should again be ascertained. Sometimes, Dr. Segraves cautioned, the problem
stems more from the relationship than the medication. For example, the drug
is not likely to be the cause when a patient's libido is depressed with a
spouse but not with another partner, or when orgasm can be reached through
masturbation but not coitus. But when a once-potent patient has erectile
problems with a partner and also has no spontaneous nocturnal erections, the
drug is a likely cause.
Many Options Available
Dr. Anthony J. Rothschild, a psychiatrist at Harvard Medical
School and McLean Hospital in Belmont, Mass., outlined various possible
solutions. One would be to decrease the dose, which is not always possible
without losing the therapeutic benefit. Another is to plan to engage in
sexual activity just before taking one's daily dose, which he said is often
impractical. A third is to try sexual stimulants like yohimbine, which can
be frustrating because their effects are not consistent, or to give a second
drug, like amantadine (Symmetrel), to counter orgasmic failure induced by the
antidepressant.
Dr. Rothschild has tested a fourth solution on 30 patients
who experienced sexual dysfunction from an SSRI (serotonin-reuptake inhibitor
drug): weekend holidays from the drugs, in which the last dose for the week
is taken on Thursday morning and the medication is resumed at noon on
Sunday. He reported that sexual function improved significantly in the
drug-free period for patients taking Zoloft and Paxil, but not for those on
Prozac, "which takes too long to wash out of the body." He said the brief
drug holidays did not cause a worsening of depressive symptoms.
There are other ways to deal with the sexual side-effects of
antidepressantss
Last updated: 10/05
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