Results 321 to 330 of about 1,806,168 (389)
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Female sexual dysfunction

BMJ, 2005
A common clinical problem In this issue (p 138), Ray Moynihan argues that female sexual dysfunction is essentially an invention of big pharmaceutical companies. He accuses Procter and Gamble of aggressively marketing awareness of a type of sexual dysfunction—female hypoactive desire disorder—to create a need for its new drug, transdermal testosterone
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Marital Sexual Dysfunction: Female Dysfunctions

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1977
The diagnosis, treatment, and referral of married women with sexual dysfunctions require information about the current physiologic deficit, previous sexual capacity, level of sexual desire, masturbatory experience, means of orgasmic attainment, preferred sexual partner, quality of marriage, husband's sexual capacities, and method of contraception.
S B, Levine, M, Rosenthal
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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.
D G, Patterson, E C, O'Gorman
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Sexual Dysfunction and Clomipramine

The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, 1982
Three cases of orgasmic inhibition by clomipramine are reported, one in a male and two infernales. All were depressed patients with obsessive-compulsive features. Orgasmic dysfunction manifested shortly after beginning clomipramine therapy despite a return of libido as the depression lifted. Two of these patients switched to desipramine which led to a
K C, Quirk, T R, Einarson
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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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Marital Sexual Dysfunction: Erectile Dysfunction

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1976
All clinicians are occasionally consulted by men complaining of impotence. The history is the most important step in the differential diagnostic process for this symptom. Answers to four basic questions enable the physician to recognize classic psychologic and organic patterns.
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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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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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Male Sexual Dysfunctions

Psychiatry and Sexual Medicine, 2020
Y. Reisman, P. Nobre
semanticscholar   +1 more source

From inflammation to sexual dysfunctions: a journey through diabetes, obesity, and metabolic syndrome

Journal of Endocrinological Investigation, 2018
M. Maiorino   +3 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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