Management of Libido
Problems in Menopause
By Jeanne L. Leventhal, MD
Presented
at the Conjoint Annual Meeting of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine
and the Canadian Fertility and Andrology Society 32nd Annual Postgraduate
Program, Toronto, Canada, September 25-26, 1999, and published as a course
handout to participants.
Sexuality and Aging
Menopausal and
postmenopausal women can experience decreases in both libido, orgasm, and
frequency of coitusmost commonly because of physiologic changes due to
menopause, less commonly due to depression or marital discord. The differential
diagnosis in women who are seen for sexual difficulties during the climacteric
is challenging, especially when symptoms such as decline in libido and/or
persistent dyspareunia occur simultaneously with depression and marital discord.
Estrogen, with or without androgen, can ameliorate the physiologic changes of
menopause affecting sexuality. Depression can be treated with psychotherapy,
with or without antidepressant drugs. Marital discord is best treated with
couples therapy. The marital difficulties can either be the cause or the
consequence of changes in sexual activity. In the latter case the marital
discord resolves with the return of regular coital activity.
The physiologic
changes of menopause affecting sexual response are largely mediated by estrogen.
The most notable effect is on orgasmic response: Altered nerve function due to
the hypoestrogenic state of menopause may delay clitoral reaction time and
result in slow or absent orgasmic response. This effect, along with delayed or
absent vaginal secretion, diminished orgasmic platform (ie, decreased or absent
congestion in the outer third of the vagina), and painful uterine contractions
(in some 60- to 70-year-old postmenopausal women) can further affect the sexual
experience.1,2 The psychological impact of these sexual changes is
varied and can be very disturbing to women and to their partners.
Although the ratio of
dysthymia and depression is as high as 2:1 in women versus men, many of these
women are not treated for this depression and thus enter the menopausal years
with untreated depressive illness.3-5
Depression can itself cause decreased libido as well as marital problems and can
complicate any sexual problems arising from menopause. In addition, hot flushes
and consequent nonrestorative sleep can complicate all these clinical
situations.
Medication and illness in the postmenopausal years can
affect sexuality and can complicate existing physiologic changes associated with
menopause.6 The newer forms of antidepressant medication, ie,
selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), may cause slowed or absent
orgasm and can reduce or eliminate libido in some women. Illness can decrease
desire or simply make sexual activity inadvisable, given illness-associated lack
of energy or anatomic difficulties.
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In about one third of couples,
male sexual dysfunction contributes to decreased frequency of coitus; the
remaining two thirds of couples are affected by physiologic factors of
menopause.8 The psychological aspects of aging are less a factor in
decreased coital activity than the physiologic effects of aging and the way
couples adjust to those changes. Couples may choose to include alternatives to
genital-genital contact if the male partner is having erectile problems;
increased nonpenile stimulation may be helpful for women who have delayed
response; and couples may develop a more flexible attitude toward their
sexuality.10
Sexual problems are numerous
in the US population and increase with aging. The scientific literature
indicates, however, that sexual problems in elderly people are often anatomic or
physiologic in nature,11,12 whereas sexual problems in younger people
tend to be more psychological and sociocultural.13 Because of the
complexity of sexual problems in postmenopausal women, gynecologists and primary
care physicians have a central role in expediting the differential diagnosis and
treatment.14,15
Clinical View of Sexual
Functioning
Davidson16
divided sexual functioning into behavior and potency, whereas Sarrel and
Whitehead8 divided sexual functioning into the desire phase,
excitement phase, orgastic phases, and dyspareunia. Both are useful ways to view
sexual functioning when evaluating perimenopausal and postmenopausal women.
Sex and Menopause: Studies
on Etiology of Decreased Coitus
Sexual research
on sexual functioning during the climacteric has been studied for 30 years. This
research has approached the issue from different points of view, including
biologic, psychiatric, anthropologic, and sociologic. The two main conclusions
are that decreasing sexual activity in a woman results in part from decreasing
sexual functioning of her male partner and in part from anatomic and physiologic
changes associated with her menopause. The large majority of these studies found
a decrease in coitus and sexual interest of greater than 40% within a few years
of the menopause.
Physiologic Changes at
Menopause and Their Effect on Sexuality
Hormones affect
sexual arousal through sensory perception, central as well as peripheral nerve
transmission and discharge, peripheral blood flow, and capacity to develop
muscle tension. Impairment of this mechanism can lead to diminished sexual
responsiveness, dyspareunia, decreased sexual activity, decline in sexual
desire, and sexual aversion.
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Decreasing estrogen affects
the integrity of female reproductive tract tissues. Decreased vaginal
lubrication and atrophic vaginitis result in dyspareunia. Decreased blood flow
to the reproductive organs results in diminished vasocongestion. Progressive
ischemia, thinning of the barrier layers of skin and mucous membrane tissue,
loss of subcutaneous fat, and a shrinking introitus are among many changes which
occur in the genital structures as a result of hypoestrogenemia. Extragenital
effects include loss of pelvic muscle tone, decreased intraurethral pressure, a
smaller bladder, and thinning of the mucous membrane lining of the bladder and
urethra. These effects have been found to be somewhat ameliorated by continuing
sexual activity despite no estrogen replacement. Women who were sexually active
had less atrophy than those who were not.26 In general, the health of
the vaginal tissues decline in the absence of estrogen stimulation, despite
sexual activity.
The physiology of the sexual
response changes with prolonged hypoestrogenemia. These changes include
diminished and slowed clitoral reaction time, diminished or absent secretion by
the Bartholin glands, delayed or absent vaginal secretion, decreased vaginal
length, and decreased transcervical width as well as possible painful uterine
contractions in women aged 60 years to 70 years. Lack of estrogen decreases
blood flow to the genitalia, and one study found a 50% increase in vulvar blood
flow measured ultrasonographically when estradiol treatment was initiated.27
Ovarian steroids affect nerve cell growth, proliferation, transmission time, and
rate of discharge along nerve fibers. A hypoestrogenemic state results in
altered nerve function. Possible clinical manifestations of change in peripheral
nerve function in postmenopausal women are numbness, itching, clothing
intolerance, increased 2-point discrimination threshold, paresthesia, loss of
clitoral reaction sensation, and decreased capacity for orgasm.28,29
Ovarian steroids can also affect neurotransmitters centrally, although this
topic is beyond the scope of this article.
All these changes affect
desire, mainly through aversion. A postmenopausal patient's experiences of
persistent dyspareunia, postcoital bleeding, delayed or absent lubrication, and
delayed or absent orgasm affect her motivation for sexual intercourse. Pain can
cause vaginismus, a conditioned response to painful coitus. Lack of sexual
relations due to physiologic change may then be further complicated by the
effect of this condition on the marital relationship. Decline in sexual
relations may cause a couple to respond or cope in ways that lead to further
decline in coitus and further deterioration of the marital relationship.
Testosterone and Libido
Androgen levels in
postmenopausal women decline over time. The impact of this decline on libido
depends on the woman's inherent biologic sensitivity to testosterone, her sexual
history, and many other factors. Half of postmenopausal women continue to
secrete appreciable amounts of testosterone from their ovaries, whereas the
other half of postmenopausal women have negligible ovarian production of
testosterone.30 In postmenopausal women who still secrete
testosterone, testosterone levels may be approximately 50% lower than in
premenopausal, younger women.31 Postmenopausal ovarian stromal tissue
secretes testosterone but little to no androstenedione.32
The evidence that testosterone
affects libido in women draws from clinical research on women who have lost
ovarian testosterone production.33,34 The best known of that research
was done by Sherwin35, who examined mood, memory, and libido before
and after surgical oophorectomy in the absence of preexisting depressive
illness. With regard to testosterone and libido, Sherwin35 found that
in surgically menopausal women, women receiving estrogen-testosterone
preparations reported higher levels of sexual desire and arousal and higher
frequency of sexual fantasies compared with women treated postoperatively with
estrogen alone or with placebo. Other research on replacement therapy in
postmenopausal women described use of estrogen versus estrogen-testosterone and
found that libido improved in the combined treatment group only.36-39
Evidence shows that to the degree loss of testosterone affects libido in
postmenopausal women, testosterone replacement can improve libidinal
functioning.40,41
Moreover, hormone replacement
therapy itself can decrease libido through the effect of different forms of
estrogen on sex-hormone-binding globulin (SHBG).42 In this
circumstance, estrogen replacement stimulates production of SHBG and thus
results in reduced levels of free estradiol and free testosterone. These
reductions can cause return of hot flushes and dyspareunia as well as decrease
in libido. The increase in SHBG can be ameliorated by prescribing a combined
testosterone and estrogen preparation, by changing to an estrogen preparation
that does not stimulate SHBG as greatly, or by prescribing testosterone along
with the estrogen preparation the patient is already on.
Libido and the Psyche
Physiologic problems
must always be treated despite presence of psychiatric illness, because these
two factors can have an indistinguishably intertwined impact on libido and
coital activity. Dyspareunia-related decrease in frequency of coitus can be the
primary cause of marital problems and can present as a marital problem when in
fact physiologic problems of menopause are the cause of the change in libido.
Lack of libido due to low testosterone levels can induce the same type of
marital conflict, a circumstance that can in turn mislead physicians into
diagnosing a psychological problem as the cause of the lack of libido.
For depression or anxiety
disorders to be the cause of decrease in libido, onset of the psychiatric
illness must be established and correlated with the onset of sexual symptoms.
Depression and anxiety in women may directly affect libido and sexual response
through loss of desire and also may affect the woman's sexual partner in that he
stops initiating sexual relations. Libido can be affected by marital stress as
well as by accumulated anger between the couple. Both these factors should be
taken into account when evaluating decrease in libido.13 However, the
chronicity of the coital problem and of the libidinal problem is a critical
aspect of determining the cause of decreasing libido and frequency of coitus.
For depression or anxiety
disorders to be the cause of decrease in libido, onset of the psychiatric
illness must be established and correlated with the onset of sexual symptoms.
Many perimenopausal and postmenopausal women have untreated dysthymia, a new
episode of depression, or an untreated anxiety disorder. Because of the high
prevalence of these untreated psychiatric illnesses, the likelihood of
psychiatric comorbidity in postmenopausal women is high.43
Many types of medication used
to treat psychiatric illness can lead to a decrease in libido or orgasm. This
issue will be reviewed in another article on the newer forms of antidepressant
medication. Because prevalence of depression and anxiety disorders is higher in
women than in men and often remains untreated, the probability of a comorbid
psychiatric disorder developing in midlife patients is high. Consequently,
evaluation for problems of libido requires in-depth evaluation for depression
and anxiety as well as for marital discord.
Psychological barriers to
continued sexual functioning can also exist. Women who did not find sex
pleasurable before menopause may look forward to ceasing sexual activity after
menopause. Women with problems in their marital relationships may have
resentment toward their spouses, and menopause may give these women permission
to decline sex. Some women were raised to believe that sexual relations end at a
certain age, and altered body image due to atrophic changes can impact libido.
Consideration of these factors is necessary for understanding libido and the
psyche.44 For marital problems to be the cause of decrease in libido,
the marital problems must precede the decrease in libido and must be somewhat
long-standing.
Cultural Issues
Cultural issues too can
affect a woman's view of herself and thus can affect her psyche as well as her
libido. Societal attitudes toward sex in midlife affect behavior.12 A
woman's value as a sexual person increases or decreases postmenopausally
according to the society in which she lives.12 In a Nigerian study,
most of the older women became sexually abstinent.21 In contrast,
older women in almost 25% of primitive societies were seen as less inhibited,
became more sexually active, and were more attractive to young men. Thus,
societal context can substantially affect women's libido.21
Previous sexual functioning
has also proved to be a predictor of future sexual functioning. Koster and Garde45
examined sexual wellness in Danish women aged 40, 45, and 51 years by in-person
interview and by questionnaire and found that current frequency of sexual desire
was highly correlated with former sexual activity. An additional finding was
that anticipation of declining desire predicted decline in desire.
Sexual scripts may require
people to adapt to the challenges of aging. Geriatric problems with health,
pulmonary function, cardiovascular function, and mobility may all affect a
woman's ability to have sexual relations.7 Degree of comfort with
alternative modes of sexual interaction may also affect her ability to have
continued sexual relations.46
Summary
Coital and
libidinal change can be singularly caused by anatomic and physiologic change
associated with the climactericby psychiatric illness, by marital discord, or by
a combination of all these factors. The ideal treatment for women in midlife is
complete evaluation of the factors affecting sexuality and use of a combined
treatment approach to ameliorate these factors. Use of such an individualized
approach can enable the women in midlife to continue to have a satisfying sexual
life, should they choose to do so.
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