Posted on 02/12/2003 11:48:19 AM PST by MadIvan
Viagra doesn't work for most women |
A new approach might be on the verge of producing an effective sex drug for women.
Unlike Viagra, the male impotency pill which acts on the sexual organs, the drug given to women in this study acts on the brain.
Tests carried out by Ian Russell, a specialist nurse at Dumfries and Galloway NHS Trust, have produced promising results.
His work is featured in the BBC Two Science programme Horizon.
Ten women suffering from reduced sexual desire were treated with a drug called apomorphine.
Apomorphine is active in the brain where it mimics the effect of one of the brain's main chemical messengers, dopamine.
Lack of desire
Problems with desire are the most common complaint reported by women who seek help for sexual problems.
Ian Russell is excited by the results |
"The results were astonishing" Russell told Horizon.
Ever since its launch in 1998, scientists have been investigating whether Viagra could work for women too.
Viagra was the first oral treatment for male erection problems and has been used by more than 20 million men worldwide.
Enzyme reaction
Viagra works by blocking the action of a key enzyme in the pelvis.
This increases the blood-flow to the penis following sexual stimulation and it is this extra blood-flow that makes patients with erectile dysfunction more likely to achieve and maintain an erection.
However, clinical trial results have revealed that apart from small subgroups of women, like those with very specific problems associated with vaginal blood-flow, Viagra will probably do nothing for the majority of women with sexual problems.
The reason seems to be that, despite the physical similarities between male and female genitalia, there are crucial differences in our sexuality.
In men, blood-flow to the penis is at the heart of the sexual response.
However, research has shown that for women, vaginal blood-flow can have little to do with feeling aroused.
Experiments in Amsterdam by Clinical Psychologist Ellen Laan have shown that blood flow to the vagina increased while women watched pornographic material, despite the fact that many didn't report feeling 'turned on'.
It seems that in women feelings of arousal and desire are much more to do with the response of the brain than that of the sexual organs - and this could explain why drugs that act on the brain may provide an effective treatment for female sexual problems, such as loss of desire.
Sex on the Brain
Despite the encouraging initial results from Scotland, scientists remain cautious about Ian Russell's findings.
"We will have to wait until we have controlled, double blind studies before we know" said Professor Julia Heimen, clinical psychologist at the University of Washington.
Russell agrees and has begun a much larger clinical trial to investigate. This should be completed next year.
<A target=hardon href="http://www.uprima.net/">.
No way I'm gonna click on that.
Thanks, I didn't know who wrote it, I just knew it wasn't me.
I always thought it was Ralph Rose. (my neighbor when I was a kid)
:^}
Red wine at 2:30 in the afternoon? No wonder they call you happy!
"Candy is dandy, but sex won't rot your teeth"
Ralph Rose definately said that one. :^}
Strange, Rosie O'Donnell claims that the two scents are: tuna fish and Tutti Frutti. Go figure.
I'm in Ireland. It's 8.30 p.m.
Because she knows she's given her last *******.
You're in Ireland and your happy? :^}
Most certainly! :-)
I hope they didn't spend much money on that part of the study.
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