Scottish Daily Mail

The REAL reason so many women have lost their sex drive

Drug giants have spent millions trying, but no one’s yet found a female Viagra. Why? They’ve all been looking in the wrong place . . .

- By THEA JORDAN

WOMEN, it seems, are increasing­ly losing interest in sex. Around a third of pre-menopausal women and half of older women report sexual problems, with lack of desire a main cause, according to the Sexual Advice Associatio­n.

A study recently published in the journal BMJ open found that more than a third of 5,000 women aged between 16-74 surveyed said they’d lost interest in sex for three months or more in the previous year. And nearly two-thirds of these women said they found their lack of libido distressin­g.

This is not a problem unique to women — around one in five men experience low libido at some point, but they definitely have the advantage when it comes to treatments.

It’s now 20 years since Viagra provided an instant fix for men who struggled to achieve an erection, however scientists have not been able to produce as successful a pill to help women feel more in the mood.

Some experts think the reason this has proved so elusive is that many women are dealing with underlying health conditions, from incontinen­ce to menopausal symptoms and pelvic pain, that affect their interest in sex, and no ‘pink Viagra’ is going to sort this out.

CONCERNS ABOUT ‘PINK VIAGRA’

YET for years a female Viagra has been the Holy Grail. So there has been some excitement about a drug called bremelanot­ide, which has just undergone successful phase 3 clinical trials in the U.S., the last stage before a drug can be licensed.

It was originally tested as a tanning pill in the eighties but was found to boost muscle recovery. Body builders of both sexes found unexpected benefits — the men reported spontaneou­s erections, the women said it put them ‘in the mood’. The drug company, Palatin Technologi­es, switched their efforts to developing it as a treatment for female sexual dysfunctio­n.

The drug works by binding to chemicals in the brain involved in sexual desire, increasing production of the ‘feel-good’ chemical dopamine which plays a key function in arousal. For best effects, the woman must inject herself around 45 minutes before sex.

Trials found it worked better than a placebo but the developmen­t of the treatment suffered a setback in 2007 when the original nasal spray version was found to cause high blood pressure in some, leading the Food and Drug Administra­tion in the U.S. to halt trials.

The manner of administer­ing the drug was changed to an injection. The latest trials have shown that as well as improving a woman’s libido generally, bremalanot­ide also makes sex more satisfying for premenopau­sal women. Palatin Technologi­es now hopes to make billions from worldwide sales.

But before the champagne is opened, experts urge caution. not least because bremelanot­ide would not be the first ‘female Viagra’ to be licensed and promise much — only to then fall short. Addyi was also labelled the female Viagra when it was launched in 2015.

originally developed as an antidepres­sant, it reduces the effect of the brain chemical serotonin, which in turn leads to an increase in dopamine levels.

In the UK, Addyi is yet to receive approval due to the cost (up to £700 for a month’s supply) as well as concerns about its effectiven­ess.

even in the U.S., where it is licensed, take–up has been slow, probably because Addyi doesn’t help all women — only around 10 per cent found any increase in ‘sexually satisyfing events’ compared to those taking a placebo, and around 75 per cent of those who take it experience sideeffect­s such as nausea, headache and dizziness.

It also has to be taken daily, and drinking alcohol can make sideeffect­s worse.

But if a pill isn’t the answer, researcher­s at the University of michigan in the U.S. have been trying out a new device which sends electrical signals from a needle inserted in a woman’s ankle to stimulate nerves and blood supply in the genital area.

Although it reportedly creates a pleasant tingling, there are concerns about how practical it is during energetic love-making sessions (as the needle needs to remain in situ).

LOOKING AT THE BIGGER PICTURE

THE focus on pills — and zappers — misses the bigger problem, say experts. This is not just that there are so many complex factors in female desire, such as stress and breakdown of relationsh­ips — though clearly these play a role.

‘A woman seeks intimacy which leads her to be receptive to sexual stimuli and only then feels desire,’ says Dr Catherine Hood, a consultant in psychosexu­al medicine at St Pancras Hospital, London.

However experts are increasing­ly admitting that often low libido in women is nothing to do with what’s going on in their head — there are a whole range of physical issues that can kill desire.

It might be that the muscles in their pelvis are so tense it makes it difficult to have sex, or the impact of the menopause makes it painful. Fix the physical problem, they say, and a woman’s normal desire for sex will return.

‘There are many physical reasons why women lose their desire for sex, including illness and pelvic pain,’ says Dr Hood.

‘It may be that drugs could help solve issues that are caused by genuine chemical or hormonal imbalances, but these are just one small part of a bigger picture when it comes to low libido in women.’

Yet these physical factors are often overlooked, says myra Robson, senior women’s health therapist at the Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust.

‘We see women who are trying to maintain good sex lives while dealing with issues such as endometrio­sis, [where womb lining-like tissue develops elsewhere, causing scarring and irritation] which can cause deep pelvic pain; fibroids, which affect the lining of the womb, and stress incontinen­ce, which affects one in three women after childbirth,’ she says. ‘These things need to be

sorted out first before we go for the candles and the chocolates, and long before we even think about female Viagra.’

WHEN MAKING LOVE IS A PAIN

Dyspareuni­a, or painful sex, is a common cause of low sex drive in women. around 30 per cent of women experience this according to an article in the Journal of sexual Medicine in 2015. Large numbers of women do not tell their partner when sex hurts. They might want to have sex, but go off it as it is so painful for them.

‘it’s a common and distressin­g complaint and it has been a neglected female health problem and can affect young women, women after having children and women who are already through the menopause,’ says Mike Bowen, a consultant gynaecolog­ist based in London and Oxford. ‘it can be felt as deep pain within the pelvis or superficia­l pain in the vulva during intercours­e.’

it is associated with issues such as vaginal dryness and anxiety about sex as well as a range of physical problems, from painful skin conditions to urinary tract infections and endometrio­sis. Women who have perineal scars after childbirth are also more likely to find sex painful until the scar tissue has stretched and softened, which can take years.

‘Fortunatel­y, there are many ways to treat dyspareuni­a, by treating the underlying causes, whether they be physical, emotional or a combinatio­n of both,’ says Mr Bowen.

any form of incontinen­ce can put women off sex: stress incontinen­ce, the most common form that leads to small leaks of urine when someone coughs, sneezes or laughs, affects around one in three women in the uK.

‘Women may feel dirty and unclean and they may not want to have sex at all,’ says Dr Hood.

stress incontinen­ce occurs because weakness around the pelvic floor (the band of muscles that stretch from the pubic bone to the front to the spine) means the neck of the bladder is not well-supported, so urine can leak out when the bladder is put under pressure. This commonly happens after childbirth, as the ligaments that support the pelvic floor become stretched during pregnancy or labour.

pelvic floor exercises can help — although ideally these should be done under the guidance of a specialist physiother­apist, who are in short supply.

apps such as squeezy and gadgets such as innovo, which emits electrical impulses to contract the pelvic floor muscles, can help.

‘There is a place for these devices but women can also try simple techniques like going to the loo before sex and abstaining from coffee and tea, which are mild diuretics,’ says Dr Hood.

a lesser-known issue is pelvic tension, when muscles in the pelvic floor are knotted and tight, which can make sex virtually impossible. yet it is surprising­ly common: up to 15 per cent of women aged between 18 and 50 are affected, according to a study published in the March 1996 issue of Obstetrics and Gynaecolog­y.

it can be caused by stress and anxiety, slouched posture, chronic constipati­on and even over-exercise. it is a recognised medical condition which can be treated by internal massage, widely available on the nHs.

amanda savage, a specialist pelvic floor physiother­apist at the private south Cambridge physiother­apy clinic in Hauxton, Cambridge, treats many women who suffer from pelvic tension.

‘We often find that women have such overly tense muscles in their pelvic region, their muscles are unable to let go and relax. This can cause long-term pain.’

DON’T BLAME THE MENOPAUSE

iT’s generally assumed that desire will naturally drop with age, especially following the menopause, but there is no evidence that this should happen to women.

indeed when Tim spector, professor of epidemiolo­gy at King’s College, London, looked at the effect of the menopause on women’s libido he found that sexual dysfunctio­n problems didn’t increase but stayed constant, affecting around 22 per cent of women. some women actually saw improvemen­ts in sexual function after the menopause.

The results of the four-year study, published in the Journal of sexual Medicine in 2015, were ‘a little surprising’, professor spector admits. ‘They suggest that menopause has been exaggerate­d as an excuse for everything.

‘By modifying your life and attitudes towards desire, you can change things sometimes surprising­ly for the better, although you are older,’ he says.

any reduced libido is usually associated with hot flushes or vaginal dryness (which can make sex painful). ‘as oestrogen levels drop, there can be problems like vaginal dryness,’ says Kathy abernethy, specialist menopause nurse and Chair of the British Menopause society, adding that if these are treated, for example with hormone replacemen­t therapy (HrT), oestrogen creams and lubricants, a woman can find her desire returns.

Dr Hood says that women who maintain active sex lives are more likely to keep thinning and dryness at bay: ‘There’s a maxim, use it or lose it, which definitely applies to women having a great sex life past the menopause. sexual intercours­e helps to keep the walls of the vagina thicker and more elastic.’

some doctors believe that a lack of sexual desire in women is linked to low levels of the male sex hormone, testostero­ne, which in women is produced in small amounts in the ovaries and drives sexual arousal.

Testostero­ne patches deliver small amounts of a synthetic form of the hormone while testostero­ne creams can be used by peri and post-menopausal women on an ‘off-label’ basis (i.e. the drug has not been approved for that use).

Dr Martin Galy, a hormone specialist practising in London, says that at least half of his female patients complainin­g of loss of sex drive have inadequate levels of testostero­ne. However, this is a controvers­ial area, and Dr Galy admits that the science for what counts as ‘inadequate’ is ‘inexact’.

‘a woman’s testostero­ne levels could be very low and her libido is fine,’ he explains. ‘it works for some women, but not everyone.’ There are also a range of potential side-effects such as bone softening, hair loss and acne.

TRY TO KEEP LOVE ALIVE

WHaTeVer the cause, the impact a lack of desire can have on women should not be underestim­ated, explains Denise Knowles, a sex and relationsh­ip counsellor for relate. ‘a healthy sex life is good for your relationsh­ip and how you feel,’ she says.

‘sex stimulates the production of feel-good hormones dopamine and oxytocin, making you feel closer to your partner as well as improving blood flow, which helps keep the circulator­y system in good shape and burning calories. There are all sorts of good reasons why you should take steps to foster your desire.’

Dr Hood says people do have to make an effort. she often sees couples where the woman complains she no longer feels spontaneou­s desire and the man complains his partner won’t initiate sex. ‘But perhaps we put too much emphasis on “spontaneou­s desire”, which only really happens in new relationsh­ips. after two years or so, spontaneit­y is replaced by a new cycle of desire, which requires him to initiate intimacy to which she can respond sexually.’

There is also very often a difference in libido between a man and woman, suggests Dr Hood. Generally speaking, one person, usually a woman, loses spontaneou­s desire, she has said previously. ‘They don’t think about sex that much, they don’t initiate it and don’t really feel like having it.

‘But when they do have sex, they often enjoy it — they have what’s known as reactive sex drive. also, the person with the reactive sex drive needs to be open to having sex, not just short-circuit the whole idea.’

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