Hour-Long Stand-Up Orgasm While Shopping
Harry Edwards
laughingwolf at ev1.net
Tue Jan 25 21:13:16 EST 2005
From the Health section of the NY Times, a cautionary tale of the
hidden drawbacks and talents of antidepressants. How is it that women
have all the fun even when they are depressed?? Although if I had an
experience like the one described below, I'd be headed for the
Emergency Room. twisty dodds
A Pill's Surprises, for Patient and Doctor Alike
By RICHARD A. FRIEDMAN, M.D.
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Published: January 25, 2005
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s a psychopharmacologist, I know that every patient responds slightly
differently to medication. But it wasn't until I met Susan that I
understood just how differently.
She'd come to see me because she was depressed, and I'd successfully
treated her with a course of Zoloft, a popular antidepressant. But as
often happens, Susan's desire for sex had vanished along with her
depressed mood.
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"I kind of miss it, but I feel really bad for my husband, who's
getting very frustrated," she said.
The sexual side effects of antidepressants like Zoloft and Prozac -
the class of drugs known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or
S.S.R.I.'s - are well known. The drugs frequently cause diminished
libido, erectile dysfunction in men, and delayed orgasm or an inability
to climax at all in women. The same flooding of the brain with
serotonin that alleviates depression leads to sexual effects in many
patients.
Early on, the rates of sexual side effects from S.S.R.I.'s reported in
the medical literature were quite low, in the range of 10 percent to 20
percent. But clinicians knew better. Most of their patients reported
some sexual effects, and it quickly became clear that the early reports
were wrong.
The reason for this error was simple. Early clinical trials of the
drugs did not look for sexual side effects; they just recorded problems
that patients spontaneously reported. Because most patients are
reluctant to bring up any sexual side effects on their own, the
researchers got the false impression that these drugs had little effect
on sexuality. When the subjects were specifically asked about sexual
side effects, the rates rose to 40 percent to 50 percent.
Susan fell into that unlucky percentage, and she asked me if anything
could be done. There were three possible approaches, I told her. She
could stop the drug from time to time, a strategy that might
temporarily restore her sex drive but could cause discontinuation
symptoms; she could lower the dose of the antidepressant, which might
provoke a relapse of depression; or we could try to counteract the side
effects with another medication.
A temporary escape didn't appeal to Susan, so we decided on the third
approach, an antidote. The question was, Which one? Serotonin-blocking
drugs like Periactin, an antihistamine, treat sexual side effects, but
they can also undo the drugs' antidepressant effects. I decided to
prescribe Wellbutrin, a different class of antidepressant that has
shown some ability to counteract sexual dysfunction caused by
S.S.R.I.'s.
Little did I know.
Two weeks later, Susan called from her cellphone to say that the
antidote was working. While shopping, she said, she spontaneously had
an orgasm that had lasted on and off for nearly two hours . She was
more delighted than alarmed, but I was stunned. I have had my share of
therapeutic surprises, but this was hard to believe.
Was this a medical emergency or unrepeatable fluke that Susan needn't
worry about? When I saw her the next day in my office, she was calm and
somewhat amused by my concern. After all, since when is an orgasm a
cause for alarm?
I was worried, though, that the addition of Wellbutrin had set off an
episode of mania, an effect that antidepressants can have in up to 5
percent of patients. In that case, her prolonged orgasm might be a
symptom of hypersexuality, common in mania. But Susan didn't seem
either manic or depressed.
It seems that for her, the Wellbutrin just had an extreme sexually
enhancing effect. Several colleagues told me about patients of theirs
who had experienced heightened sexual desire on Wellbutrin, but none of
the reports came close to Susan's. That Wellbutrin can enhance sexual
pleasure isn't surprising: it increases the activity of dopamine, a key
neurotransmitter in the brain's reward pathway. In fact, drugs of
abuse, like cocaine, alcohol and opiates, release dopamine in this
circuit - and so does sex.
A year has passed without a recurrence of this surprising side effect.
But Susan is enjoying sex now - clearly more than she did before she
became depressed. Because this was her first episode of major
depression, the chance of a recurrence was only about 50 percent, so I
suggested stopping the antidepressant. She liked that idea, but then
paused and asked, "Do I have to stop the Wellbutrin, too?"
We both laughed.
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