Antidepressants & sexual dysfunction
If you are a women taking an antidepressant and experience sexual dysfunction, you are not alone. One in six women in the U.S. take antidepressants, and sexual dysfunction is a common side effect. A paper published in the September issue of Proceedings shares new research on this connection.
“We know that antidepressants really change the balance of neurotransmitters, and that in itself impacts sexual function,” says Mayo Clinic psychologist and article co-author Dr. Jordan Rullo. “Desire, arousal, orgasms. Those are the three things antidepressants can affect.”
A lot of women — and men too, for that matter — do not tell their prescribing provider if they are experiencing sexual side effects. One study found that 15 percent of women stopped taking their psychotropic medication due to sexual side effects. Rullo says, “The first one to three weeks of taking an antidepressant is when you start feeling those side effects, and you don’t start feeling the benefit until four to six weeks.”