Pharmacopsychiatry 1995; 28(3): 84-92
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-979596
Original Paper

© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Different Patterns of Sexual Dysfunctions Associated with Psychiatric Disorders and Psychopharmacological Treatment

Results of an Investigation by Semistructured Interview of Schizophrenic and Neurotic Patients and Methadone-substituted Opiate AddictsL. Teusch, N. Scherbaum, H. Böhme, S. Bender, G. Eschmann-Mehl, M. Gastpar
  • Department of General Psychiatry, University Hospital, Rhein. Landes- und Hochschulklinik, Essen, Germany
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
23 April 2007 (online)

Abstract

Little is known about sexual dysfunctions associated with psychiatric disorders and psychopharmacological treatment. In the present study schizophrenic patients (n = 45, mostly under neuroleptic treatment), neurotic patients (n = 50, mostly treated without medication), methadone-substituted opiate addicts (n = 37), and normal controls (n = 41) were included. They were interviewed with the aid of a sex-differentiated semistructured questionnaire on sexual function. All the methadone-substituted opiate addicts and nearly all the schizophrenic patients suffered from dysfunctions in at least one criterion. The three clinical groups differed significantly from the controls in sexual interest, emotional arousal, physiological arousal (erectile function/vaginal lubrication), performance (ejaculatory function/vaginism, dyspareunia), and orgasm satisfaction. Characteristic patterns of dysfunction were found in the male patients. The schizophrenic patients had significantly more dysfunctions of interest, physiological arousal, performance, and orgasm than the controls. Emotional arousal, erectile and ejaculatory functions, and orgasm satisfaction were impaired more frequently in the male schizophrenics than in the neurotic patients. Reduced sexual interest, emotional arousal, and orgasm satisfaction were reported more frequently by the methadone-substituted opiate addicts than by the neurotic men. Emotional arousal was even more frequently reduced than in the schizophrenic men. There was no correlation between sexual dysfunction and particular neuroleptics or neuroleptic or methadone dosage. The results are compared with the literature and suggestions made for further investigations.

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