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Female Libido Research
A woman's libido can affect much more than just her desire to procreate. It can also affect her over all mental and physical health. The lack or over drive of a woman's libido can be a signal of other underlying problems. Women should feel free and comfortable to discuss changes in their libido with their doctor as female libido is an internal message board from your body. It can point doctor's to the right path when it comes to your health care.
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Female libido Research
The Awareness of Female Sexuality in the 20th Century
After the hypocrisy and tyranny directed at female sexuality in the 19th Century the change of attitude occurred slowly. Literature became more permissive with authors like D. H. Laurence, Henry Miller and Anais Nin being influential. Theatre and cinema remain conservative. In the real world Marie Stopes’Married Love was greatly influential, listed by Bragg as one of “the 12 books that changed the world”, stressed the emotional importance of sexual intercourse within marriage. She did not discuss contraception, masturbation or sex outside of marriage in the earlier editions. Kinsey and colleagues in 1953 broke the scientific silence by publishing details of the sexual behaviour in the human female. Seymour Fisher devoted a whole book to the female orgasm and Shere Hite in her extensive use of questionnaires from women described six basic types of masturbation in women. Masters and Johnson's work on the physiology was a landmark in understanding normal sexual response. Greenblatt pioneered the use of testosterone for loss of libido and subsequently the female androgen deficiency syndrome (FADS) has been recognised. There are now good control studies indicating the value of testosterone implants, tablets and patches by Davis and her colleagues to improve the problems of hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD).
Nineteenth-century Attitudes to Female Sexuality
The nineteenth-century medical attitude to normal female sexuality was cruel, with gynaecologists and psychiatrists leading the way designing operations for the cure of the serious contemporary disorders of masturbation and nymphomania. The gynaecologist, Isaac Baker Brown (1811-1873), and the distinguished endocrinologist, Charles Brown-Séquard (1817-1894) advocated clitoridectomy to prevent the progression to masturbatory melancholia, paralysis, blindness and even death. Even after the public disgrace of Baker Brown in 1866-7, the operation remained respectable and widely used in other parts of Europe. This medical contempt for normal female sexual development was reflected in public and literary attitudes. Or perhaps it led and encouraged public opinion. There is virtually no novel or opera in the last half of the 19th century where the heroine with “a past” survives to the end. H G Well's Ann Veronica and Richard Strauss's Der Rosenkavalier, both of which appeared in 1909, break the mould and are important milestones. In the last 50 years new research into the sociology, psychology and physiology of sexuality has provided an understanding of decreased libido and inadequate sexual response in the form of Female Sexual Disorder (FSD) or Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder (HSDD). This is now regarded as a disorder worthy of treatment, either by various forms of counseling or by the use of hormones, particularly estrogens and testosterone.
Androgen therapy for low female libido
Libido—or sexual desire—can be affected by several factors. Sexual motivation, emotional intimacy and sexual skills of the couple, psychological and biological factors and sex hormones—including estrogens and androgens—all play roles. Decreased levels of androgens in late reproductive years contribute to the decline in sexual interest/desire in older women. Several investigators agree that androgens influence libido and behavior but not activity or response—such as lubrication and orgasm.
Loss of female libido
For many women, a rewarding sex life is an important part of life. The loss of the enjoyment and satisfaction a good sex life brings has many knock-on effects, including poor self-esteem and relationship difficulties. These, in turn, affect women’s home and work life. Although, for many women, a lack of libido is often a temporary problem, for others it can be long term, unless medical or psychosexual advice and help are provided. This article investigates the presentation, diagnosis and support for women experiencing a loss of libido.
Keywords: libido; sex; sexually transmitted infections; sexual dysfunction
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