Genital and Subjective Measurement of the Time Course Effects of an Acute Dose of Testosterone vs. Placebo in Postmenopausal Women
- 1 January 2007
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Sexual Medicine
- Vol. 4 (1) , 209-217
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1743-6109.2006.00406.x
Abstract
Recent research on the impact of testosterone (T) on female sexual function has yielded inconsistent results, and few studies have used physiological measures of genital arousal. This study examined the effects of an acute dose of methyltestosterone (MT) on physiological (genital) and subjective sexual response in postmenopausal women. Vaginal pulse amplitude (VPA) and self-reported sexual response. Randomized, double-blind, crossover, placebo-controlled trial of 5 mg MT, consisting of two separate 8-hour visits. Participants were 10 postmenopausal women without sexual dysfunction. Participants viewed both neutral and erotic video segments during five post-dose trials while their genital and subjective responses were monitored. The Wilcoxon signed rank test indicated a significant difference in VPA between the T (M = 0.018, SD = 0.018) and placebo (M = 0.016, SD = 0.017) conditions at 4.5 hours post-dose (P = 0.03). Higher difference scores were noted for 80% of subjects during the T condition at 4.5 hours, in contrast with only 50% of subjects responding to T at the other four time points. No differences were found on VPA relative change scores or subjective sexual arousal scores. When summed across all five time points, genital and subjective measures were correlated regardless of medication condition (0.62 and 0.60 for self-reported physical and mental sexual arousal scores, respectively). These findings in postmenopausal women combined with those of two previous investigations in premenopausal women demonstrate a probable acute-dose time delay for genital sexual effects of exogenous T with no change in self-reported sexual arousal. Further investigation is needed to determine whether acute dosing of T has a consistent and predictable impact on genital arousal that has promise for the treatment of any subgroup of women with sexual disorders.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Biological and Psychosocial Pathophysiology of Female Sexual Dysfunction During the Menopausal TransitionThe Journal of Sexual Medicine, 2005
- Clinical Biologic Pathophysiologies of Women's Sexual DysfunctionThe Journal of Sexual Medicine, 2005
- Female androgen insufficiency: the princeton consensus statement on definition, classification, and assessmentFertility and Sterility, 2002
- Randomized clinical trials of combined estrogen-androgen preparations: effects on sexual functioningFertility and Sterility, 2002
- Effects of Hormone Replacement Therapy on Sexual Psychophysiology and Behavior in PostmenopauseJournal of Women's Health & Gender-Based Medicine, 2000
- Psychoendocrinological Assessment of the Menstrual Cycle: The Relationship Between Hormones, Sexuality, and MoodArchives of Sexual Behavior, 1997
- Sex, hormones and the brainThe European Journal of Contraception & Reproductive Health Care, 1997
- Oral contraceptives, androgens, and the sexuality of young women: II. The role of androgensArchives of Sexual Behavior, 1991
- The role of androgen in the maintenance of sexual functioning in oophorectomized women.Psychosomatic Medicine, 1987
- Mood, Sexuality, Hormones, and the Menstrual Cycle. III. Sexuality and the Role of AndrogensPsychosomatic Medicine, 1983