Literature DB >> 27692844

Cardiometabolic Risk and Female Sexuality: Focus on Clitoral Vascular Resistance.

Elisa Maseroli1, Egidia Fanni1, Sarah Cipriani1, Irene Scavello1, Francesca Pampaloni2, Cesare Battaglia3, Massimiliano Fambrini2, Edoardo Mannucci4, Emmanuele A Jannini5, Mario Maggi6, Linda Vignozzi7.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The relation between sexual and cardiovascular health in women is not well defined. Clitoral color Doppler ultrasound (CDU) with assessment of the pulsatility index (PI), reflecting resistance to blood flow, has been proposed as an objective measurement of sexual functioning. AIM: To investigate associations between clitoral PI and cardiometabolic risk factors, sexual and intrapsychic parameters, and self-perception of body image.
METHODS: Seventy-one adult heterosexual women in a stable relationship attending our clinic for sexual dysfunction were consecutively recruited. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Patients underwent physical, laboratory, and clitoral color Doppler ultrasound examinations and completed the Female Sexual Function Index, the Middlesex Hospital Questionnaire, and the Body Uneasiness Test (BUT).
RESULTS: Clitoral PI was positively correlated with body mass index (r = 0.441, P < .0001), waist circumference (r = 0.474, P < .0001), glycemia (r = 0.300, P = .029), insulin (r = 0.628, P = .002), homeostatic model assessment index (r = 0.605, P = .005), triglycerides (r = 0.340, P = .011), total cholesterol (r = 0.346, P = .010), and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (r = 0.334, P = .016). All relations, with the exception of glycemia, retained statistical significance after adjusting for age, smoking habit, and years since menopause (P < .0001 for body mass index, waist circumference, and triglycerides; P < .05 for all other associations). Analysis of covariance, after adjusting for confounders, showed that women with obesity or metabolic syndrome (MetS) showed significantly higher PI values (obesity: F = 17.79, P = .001; MetS: F = 7.37, P = .019). In particular, a stepwise increase of PI was found as a function of increasing MetS components (β = 0.434, P = .007). Clitoral PI was negatively associated with Female Sexual Function Index arousal (β = -0.321, P = .014) and satisfaction (β = -0.289, P = .026) scores and positively associated with Middlesex Hospital Questionnaire somatized anxiety symptoms, even after adjusting for age, smoking habit, years since menopause, and current use of psychiatric medication (β = 0.354, P = .011). A positive association also was observed between PI and the BUT positive symptom distress index (β = 0.322, P = .039) and BUT for dislike of the womb, genitals, and breast (β = 0.538, P < .0001; β = 0.642, P < .0001; β = 0.549, P < .0001, respectively). After introducing waist circumference as another covariate, the associations between clitoral PI and the BUT positive symptom distress index and BUT dislike of the womb, genitals, and breast retained statistical significance (P = .038 for positive symptom distress index; P < .0001 for dislike of womb, genitals, and breast).
CONCLUSION: Clitoral vascular resistance is positively associated with MetS (in particular insulin resistance), decreased sexual arousal, body image concerns, and increased somatized anxiety symptoms. Further studies are needed to establish whether treatment of metabolic abnormalities might improve clitoral color Doppler ultrasound indices and sexual outcomes.
Copyright © 2016 International Society for Sexual Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cardiovascular Risk; Clitoris; Female Sexual Dysfunction; Genital Blood Flow; Metabolic Syndrome; Ultrasound

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27692844     DOI: 10.1016/j.jsxm.2016.09.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Sex Med        ISSN: 1743-6095            Impact factor:   3.802


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