Medications
Because a woman's sexuality encompasses
physical, emotional, and psychological factors, the causes of
sexual problems are often complex and interrelated.
Medications may be used in treating certain conditions that contribute to
sexual problems.
Medication Choices
Estrogen. If you only have
vaginal dryness and irritation (and not other symptoms such as hot flashes),
you can use a limited amount of
estrogen in a cream, tablet, or ring in the vagina.
The daily estrogen makes your tissue less thin and sensitive and more moist.
Many women find that using a cream or tablet twice a week is enough. This may
increase vaginal tone and lubrication, which will decrease
vulvar dryness, irritation, and shrinkage (atrophy).
If you also have other
menopausal symptoms that affect physical and mental
well-being, talk to your doctor about taking daily (systemic) estrogen therapy.
Estrogen can increase the blood flow in the
vagina
, as well as reduce hot flashes and other
symptoms of
menopause.
Estrogen therapy or
estrogen-progestin therapy can be oral (pills),
vaginal, or transdermal (with a patch). In a small number of women, hormone
therapy causes heart disease, breast cancer, ovarian cancer, dangerous blood
clots, stroke, and dementia. Talk to your doctor about whether this therapy is
right for you.
Testosterone. This hormone
may play a part in a woman's sex drive and satisfaction. The ovaries make
testosterone throughout a woman's lifetime. Women have
the most testosterone in early adulthood. Testosterone levels drop by half
between the early 20s and the early 40s.
In women who have their
ovaries removed (oophorectomy), testosterone drops by 50%.10 If you have had an oophorectomy, your doctor may suggest
trying
testosterone therapy. But the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) has not approved any testosterone therapy for women.
What To Think About
The
methyltestosterone-estrogen formula called Estratest is not approved by the FDA. The company that makes it markets it
for moderate to severe menopausal symptoms.
It is also prescribed to some menopausal women to
improve sexual desire and
response. But Estratest is made with
methyltestosterone, which the body uses differently than testosterone. It does
not directly raise the amount of testosterone in your body. And taking a
testosterone by mouth does put you at risk for problems with your liver and
possibly your heart. Using a patch or cream does not.
At this
time, there is no testosterone pill, patch, or cream approved for women—those
made for men have too high a dose for women. Side effects of too much
testosterone include acne, facial hair, and loss of hair and a deepening of the
voice, which may be permanent.
No studies have looked at the
benefits and risks of taking testosterone for longer than 6 months. The
long-term effects of testosterone therapy in women are not known.10
Sildenafil (Viagra) is used to treat
erectile dysfunction in men. The maker of this
medicine has decided not to market it for improving women's sexual desire and
arousal. This was based on research showing that sildenafil was not effective
for most women. The maker has commented that women's sexuality is a complex mix
of physical, emotional, and relationship factors, and it is not as simple to
treat with a medicine as male erectile dysfunction is.11
Currently no
medications are approved by the FDA to treat female sexual problems, although
several paths are being studied, including stimulation of certain molecules
(receptors) in the brain and increasing blood flow to the genitals. It is still
too early in the process to know whether any of these medications will prove to
be effective and safe treatment options.12