Results 301 to 310 of about 260,851 (332)
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Sexual Anxiety in Sexual Dysfunction

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1989
Sexual anxiety was examined in 98 patients presenting with sexual dysfunction and 68 of their partners at a psychosexual clinic using the SOMA questionnaire. All patients had raised values for heterosexual anxiety. Female partners had raised values while male partners did not.
Diana G. Patterson, Ethna C. O'Gorman
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Dysfunctional sexual beliefs as vulnerability factors for sexual dysfunction

Journal of Sex Research, 2006
The differences on sexual beliefs presented by men and women with sexual dysfunction and their sexually functional counterparts were investigated. A total of 488 participants (160 females and 232 males without sexual problems and 47 females and 49 males with a DSM-IV diagnosis of sexual dysfunction) answered the Sexual Dysfunctional Beliefs ...
Pedro Nobre, José Pinto-Gouveia
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Fluoxetine and Sexual Dysfunction

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1995
To the Editor. —In his response to a question from Dr Drucker about fluoxetine (Prozac) and sexual dysfunction, Dr Hollander 1 states that sexual dysfunction with fluoxetine occurs in up to 1.9% of patients. Even though the Physicians' Desk Reference 2 still carries this figure, this is no longer believed to reflect the true incidence of sexual ...
Alan J. Gelenberg, Heather S. Hopkins
  +10 more sources

The Sexual Dysfunctions

1984
Affirmation of individual sexuality and sexual functioning has gained a unique importance in American society. Although increasingly dissociated from procreational concerns, sexual behavior has come to internalize the Protestant work ethic, so that performance and satisfaction within the sexual sphere are now measured by standards of achievement once ...
Henry E. Adams, Victor J. Malatesta
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The Therapy of Sexual Dysfunction

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1982
The last 15 years or so have witnessed a marked growth of interest in sexual problems paralleled by a growth of interest in marital and familial processes. The pioneering work of Masters and Johnson (Masters and Johnson, 1966 and 1970) has been a focus for this trend, but the increased interest shown in professional circles is in part a response to ...
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Sexual Dysfunction in Schizophrenia

Focus, 2007
Sexual dysfunctions have been described as being common in schizophrenia patients. The pathophysiology behind their development remains unclear. They can be secondary to the disease itself or an adverse event of antipsychotic medication. Therapeutic interventions are also not well studied.Earlier work has suggested that second-generation antipsychotics
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Sexuality and erectile dysfunction

2011
Sexuality is a complex concept encompassing far more than the simple sexual act. Sexuality in fact includes the physiological, behavioural and relational aspects of human sexual life, which are variously influenced by psychological factors (e.g. sexual fantasies, desire, arousal, psychosexual orientation, and the choice of the sexual object), as well ...
CARANI, Cesare   +2 more
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Sexual Dysfunction in Epilepsy

Epilepsia, 1991
Summary: Sexual dysfunction may arise more frequently in men and women with epilepsy than with other chronic illnesses, manifesting primarily as diminished sexual desire and potency. Studies using retrospective self‐report of sexual attitude and behavior find an incidence of sexual dysfunction ranging from 14–66%. Sexual dysfunction may be more common
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Sexual Dysfunction and Couple Dysfunction

2014
Couple sex therapy is best understood as a subspecialty of couple therapy. Couple sex therapy may focus on problems in desire, pleasure, eroticism, and/or satisfaction. Although arousal and orgasm problems need to be carefully assessed and treated, problems related to desire represent the primary concern that brings couples to sex therapy.
Lana M. Wald, Barry McCarthy
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Sexual Dysfunction

2014
This chapter addresses issues surrounding sexual dysfunction after concussion. Ask the patient specifically about sexual dysfunction in private, and if appropriate ask the collateral source separately. Assess for depression, severe fatigue or hypersomnia, untreated pain, and alcohol or drug abuse (especially marijuana).
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