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Question
What is female sexual dysfunction?
Is it a medical term for low sex drive? If so, what
can be done about it?
-- Stephanie
Answer
You ask a provocative question. This
past January an article in the British Medical
Journal claimed that pharmaceutical companies are
trying to create a condition called “female sexual
dysfunction” that may not exist, even though some
estimates are that 43 percent of women suffer from it.
One source for that figure was an article in the Journal
of the American Medical Association in 1999. It
reported on responses from 1,500 women to questions on
whether they had experienced sex-related problems such
as lack of desire or lack of lubrication for at least
two months. However, the authors have said that some
of those sexual problems were related to such issues
as a drop in income, having young children at home or
other sources of stress and didn’t reflect a
“medical” problem requiring treatment.
On the issue of low sex drive, a
study from the University of Pennsylvania published
last October found that women who reported declining
libido had fluctuating levels of testosterone, the
hormone that governs sex drive in both men and women.
Those who had the most variability in testosterone
levels were two to
three times more likely to report decreased libido
than those who had the most stable testosterone
levels. In the past, researchers believed that
decreased levels of testosterone, particularly after
menopause, were to blame for declining sex drive among
women. Apart from the fluctuations in testosterone
levels, the only other factors affecting the female
sex drive discovered in this study were depression and
having children in the house.
Women’s bodies produce about
one-seventh the amount of testosterone daily that men
do. About half the female supply comes from the
ovaries and half from the adrenal glands. If a
woman’s ovaries are removed, she’ll lose half her
testosterone supply and may notice a decline in her
sex drive as a result. After menopause, women’s
testosterone levels drop about one-third. Testosterone
replacement is an option, but the best method of
administering it – a skin patch, which delivers the
hormone so that it can be evenly absorbed – isn’t
yet available for women. In the meantime, you might
ask your gynecologist about another option, Estratest,
a prescription drug combining estrogen and
testosterone.
By
Andrew Weil, M.D.
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