Literature DB >> 23085496

Lower sexual interest in postpartum women: relationship to amygdala activation and intranasal oxytocin.

Heather A Rupp1, Thomas W James, Ellen D Ketterson, Dale R Sengelaub, Beate Ditzen, Julia R Heiman.   

Abstract

During the postpartum period, women experience significant changes in their neuroendocrine profiles and social behavior compared to before pregnancy. A common experience with motherhood is a decrease in sexual desire. Although the lifestyle and peripheral physiological changes associated with parturition might decrease a woman's sexual interest, we hypothesized that there are also hormone-mediated changes in women's neural response to sexual and infant stimuli with altered reproductive priorities. We predicted that amygdala activation to sexually arousing stimuli would be suppressed in postpartum versus nulliparous women, and altered with intranasal oxytocin administration. To test this, we measured amygdala activation using fMRI in response to sexually arousing pictures, infant pictures, and neutral pictures in 29 postpartum and 30 nulliparous women. Half of the women received a dose of exogenous oxytocin before scanning. As predicted, nulliparous women subjectively rated sexual pictures to be more arousing, and infant pictures to be less arousing, than did postpartum women. However, nulliparous women receiving the nasal oxytocin spray rated the infant photos as arousing as did postpartum women. Right amygdala activation was lower in postpartum versus nulliparous women in response to sexual, infant, and neutral images, suggesting a generalized decrease in right amygdala responsiveness to arousing images with parturition. There was no difference in right amygdala activation with nasal spray application. Postpartum women therefore appear to experience a decrease in sexual interest possibly as a feature of a more generalized decrease in amygdala responsiveness to arousing stimuli.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23085496      PMCID: PMC3540189          DOI: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2012.10.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Horm Behav        ISSN: 0018-506X            Impact factor:   3.587


  52 in total

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Review 2.  Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience of Adolescent Sexual Risk and Alcohol Use.

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5.  Putative Mental, Physical, and Social Mechanisms of Hormonal Influences on Postpartum Sexuality.

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6.  Differential neural responses to child and sexual stimuli in human fathers and non-fathers and their hormonal correlates.

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7.  Brain Activity Unique to Orgasm in Women: An fMRI Analysis.

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Review 10.  Nonsocial functions of hypothalamic oxytocin.

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