Non-Pharmacological Possibilities
for Treating Female Sexual Dysfunction Now on the Horizon
There has been a tremendous amount of attention paid of late to the
potential usefulness of pharmaceutical options for Female Sexual Dysfunction
(FSD). However, little, if no attention, has been paid to non-pharmaceutical
options for treating organically based FSD. Up to now, the only option that
has been investigated for women is a clitoral therapy device called the
EROS-CTD. This device actually creates a gentle suction over the clitoris
and the surrounding tissue, with the intention of increasing blood flow to
the area and enhancing lubrication and sensation.
The principle behind this device is the idea that clitoral stimulation
and tumescence (engorgement due to increased blood flow) play an important
role in female sexual arousal and overall sexual satisfaction. In normally
responsive females, engorgement occurs when sexual arousal results in smooth
muscle relaxation and arterial wall dilation within the clitoris. The CTD
device was designed to not only increase blood flow and therefore sensation
and lubrication, but also to potentially serve a therapeutic purpose,
enhancing overall clitoral blood flow over time.
The EROS-CTD was evaluated in a two center pilot study of 25 patients, 8
pre-menopausal and 6 post-menopausal women with complaints of
Female Sexual
Arousal Disorder (FSAD), and 4 pre-menopausal and 7 post-menopausal women
with no sexual function complaints. The goal was to evaluate the safety and
efficacy of the EROS-CTD treatment for enhancing subjective arousal in women
with
sexual arousal disorder in the areas of: genital sensation, vaginal
lubrication, ability to reach orgasm and general sexual satisfaction.
A complete medical history and physical examination was performed on each
patient and a brief psychosexual history was taken by a sex therapist to be
certain that there was not a primary emotional or relational basis for the
woman's complaint. This was because no drug therapy or device will prove
useful to a woman who's sexual function complaints are based on relational
or emotional factors. Patients who had a history of depression, unresolved
sexual abuse, hypoactive sexual desire disorder (not caused by sexual
function complaints), diabetes, dyspareunia or certain other risk factors
were excluded from the study.
Patients were asked to use the EROS-CTD Treatment in the privacy of their
home with or without a partner. For every home session, each patient was
asked to fill out the Female Intervention Efficacy Index (FIEI), (Chronbach's
Alpha Coefficient .81), developed by Berman and Berman, measuring subjective
reports of changes in lubrication, sensation, orgasm and sexual satisfaction
following use of the EROS-CTD.
Results
after using device |
Sensation |
Orgasm |
Sexual Satisfaction |
Lubrication |
Women
w FSAD
(%) |
Women
w/o FSAD
(%) |
Women
w FSAD
(%) |
Women
w/o FSAD
(%) |
Women
w FSAD
(%) |
Women
w/o FSAD
(%) |
Women
w FSAD
(%) |
Women
w/o FSAD
(%) |
| More than Before |
100 |
78 |
56 |
40 |
94 |
20 |
81 |
40 |
| Same as Before |
0 |
22 |
44 |
60 |
6 |
80 |
13 |
50 |
| Less than Before |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| Couldn't Tell, Partner Yes |
|
|
|
|
|
|
6 |
10 |
According to these preliminary results, the EROS-CTD Treatment may prove
useful in treating sexual arousal complaints including reduced genital
sensation, diminished vaginal lubrication, reduced sexual satisfaction, and
diminished ability to achieve orgasm. There was no evidence of clitoral
trauma, bruising or irritation as observed during the final physical
examination on any of the patients in the study. This is a small convenience
sample of women and results can not be generalized to the larger population.
Questions of whether ongoing use of the EROS-CTD Treatment will improve
overall blood flow to the clitoral area or orgasmic response are yet to be
determined. Longitudinal studies with larger samples are necessary to
adequately determine the effectiveness of this intervention. However, the
implications for non-drug therapies are significant. If these preliminary
results are supported by larger scale studies, the EROS-CTD, developed by
UroMetrics, Inc., may be the first of an array of non-pharmacological
options available to women who either don't or can't take medication to
treat organically-based sexual complaints.
Next: From Sexual Dysfunction to Intimacy
Sources:
Billups, K., Berman, L., Berman, J., Metz, M., Glennon,
B., & Goldstein, I. A new pharmacological vacuum device to enhance clitoral
engorgement for treatment of female sexual arousal disorder. Journal of Sex
Education and Therapy (in submission).
Berman, L., Berman, J., Sachin, S., Goldstein, I. Effects of Viagra as
Assessed by the Female Intervention Efficacy Index (FIEI), Journal of Sex
Education in Therapy (in submission)
Berman, L, & Berman, J. Viagra and beyond: Where sex educators and
therapists fit in from a multidisciplinary perspective. Journal of Sex
Education and Therapy (in press)
Diederichs, W., Lue, T., and Tanagho, E.A. Clitoral Responses to central
nervous stimulation in dogs, IJIR, 3:7, 1991.
Kohn, I, Kaplan, S. Female sexual dysfunction, what is known and what
remains to be determined. Contemporary Urology, September, 1999, Vol. 11,
No. 9, 54-72.
Park, K., Goldstein, I., Andry, C., Siroky, M.B., Krane, R.J., Azadozi,
K.M., Vasculogenic female sexual dysfunction: The hemodynamic basis fore
vaginal engorgment insufficiency and clitoral erectile insufficiency, IJIR,
9:27-37, 1997.
Wen, C.C., Marin, C., Dhir, V., Pagan-Marin, h., Gemery, J., Reid, S., La
Salle, M.D., Salimpur, P., Adelstein, M., Shuiker, J., et. al. (1998).
Atherosclerotic vascular disease of the iliohypogastric pudendal bed in
females, IJIR 10: S64, 1998.
Last updated: 3/2000. Last reviewed: 10/05.
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