×
Create a new article
Write your page title here:
We currently have 7,593 articles on LGBTQIA+ Wiki. Type your article name above or create one of the articles listed here!



    LGBTQIA+ Wiki
    7,593Articles

    Asexual: Difference between revisions

    Content added Content deleted
    (changed "do" to the proper "due")
    No edit summary
    Line 1: Line 1:
    [[File:Aceflag.png|thumb|220x220px|The asexual flag.]]'''Hypoactive sexual desire disorder''' ('''HSDD''') or '''inhibited sexual desire''' ('''ISD''') is considered a sexual dysfunction and is characterized as a lack or absence of sexual fantasies and desire for sexual activity, as judged by a clinician. For this to be regarded as a disorder, it must cause marked distress or interpersonal difficulties and not be better accounted for by another mental disorder, a drug (legal or illegal), or some other medical condition. A person with ISD will not start, or respond to their partner's desire for, sexual activity.<ref name="ummc">University of Maryland, Medical Centre: [http://umm.edu/health/medical/ency/articles/inhibited-sexual-desire Inhibited sexual desire]</ref>
    [[File:Aceflag.png|thumb|220x220px|The asexual flag.]]
    '''Asexual''' (often shortened to '''ace''') is a sexuality defined by a lack of sexual attraction. Being asexual does not mean that one is unable to experience romantic attraction, though some asexuals are also [[aromantic]]. Asexuals can have any romantic orientation.


    There are various subtypes. HSDD can be general (general lack of sexual desire) or situational (still has sexual desire, but lacks sexual desire for current partner), and it can be acquired (HSDD started after a period of normal sexual functioning) or lifelong (the person has always had no/low sexual desire.)
    It is important to note the difference between asexuality and celibacy and abstinence. Those who are abstinent or celibate choose so do to for moral or religious reasons. Whereas an asexual people may not participate in sexual activities due to a lack of attraction.


    In the DSM-5, HSDD was split into '''male hypoactive sexual desire disorder'''<ref name="DSM5male">{{cite book | title = Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition | chapter = Male Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder, 302.71 (F52.0) | editor = American Psychiatric Association | year = 2013 | publisher = American Psychiatric Publishing | pages = 440–443}}</ref> and '''female sexual interest/arousal disorder'''.<ref name="DSM5female">{{cite book | title = Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition | chapter = Female Sexual Interest/Arousal Disorder, 302.72 (F52.22) | editor = American Psychiatric Association | year = 2013 | publisher = American Psychiatric Publishing | pages = 433–437}}</ref> It was first included in the DSM-III under the name inhibited sexual desire disorder,<ref>{{cite book |title=Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders |publisher=American Psychiatric Association |location=Washington DC |year=1980 |edition=3rd }}</ref> but the name was changed in the DSM-III-R. Other terms used to describe the phenomenon include sexual aversion and sexual apathy.<ref name="ummc" /> More informal or colloquial terms are ''frigidity'' and ''frigidness''.<ref>Munjack, Dennis, and Pamela Kanno. "An overview of outcome on frigidity: treatment effects and effectiveness." Comprehensive Psychiatry 17.3 (1976): 401-413.</ref>
    Although they lack sexual attraction some asexuals may still partake in sexual activities or be in sexual relationships. This could be for many reasons, such as, their own pleasure, the pleasure of a partner, or to have children.


    ==Causes==
    Asexual can also be used as an umbrella term to describe someone on the [[Asexual Spectrum|asexual spectrum]].
    Low sexual desire alone is not equivalent to HSDD because of the requirement in HSDD that the low sexual desire causes marked distress and interpersonal difficulty and because of the requirement that the low desire is not better accounted for by another disorder in the DSM or by a general medical problem. It is therefore difficult to say exactly what causes HSDD. It is easier to describe, instead, some of the causes of low sexual desire.


    In men, though there are theoretically more types of HSDD/low sexual desire, typically men are only diagnosed with one of three subtypes.
    == History ==
    *Lifelong/generalised: The man has little or no desire for sexual stimulation (with a partner or alone) and never had.
    One of the first (indirect) references to asexuality was in 1896 by physician, Magnus Hirschfeld, in his book ''"Sappho und Sokrates"'' where he says "...There are individuals who are without any sexual desire (“Anästhesia sexualis”)..."<ref>https://www.asexuality.org/en/topic/98639-indirect-mentions-of-asexuality-in-magnus-hirschfelds-books/</ref>
    *Acquired/generalised: The man previously had sexual interest in his present partner, but lacks interest in sexual activity, partnered or solitary.
    *Acquired/situational: The man was previously sexually interested in his present partner but now lacks sexual interest in this partner but has desire for sexual stimulation (i.e. alone or with someone other than his present partner.)


    Though it can sometimes be difficult to distinguish between these types, they do not necessarily have the same cause. The cause of lifelong/generalized HSDD is unknown. In the case of acquired/generalized low sexual desire, possible causes include various medical/health problems, psychiatric problems, low levels of testosterone or high levels of prolactin. One theory suggests that sexual desire is controlled by a balance between inhibitory and excitatory factors.<ref>{{cite book |author=Janssen, E., Bancroft J. |chapter=The dual control model: The role of sexual inhibition & excitation in sexual arousal and behavior |editor=Janssen, E. |title=The Psychophysiology of Sex |publisher=Indiana University Press |location=Bloomington IN |year=2006 }}</ref> This is thought to be expressed via neurotransmitters in selective brain areas. A decrease in sexual desire may therefore be due to an imbalance between neurotransmitters with excitatory activity like dopamine and norepinephrine and neurotransmitters with inhibitory activity, like serotonin.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Clayton AH |title=The pathophysiology of hypoactive sexual desire disorder in women |journal=Int J Gynaecol Obstet |volume=110 |issue=1 |pages=7–11 |date=July 2010 |pmid=20434725 |doi=10.1016/j.ijgo.2010.02.014 |url=http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0020-7292(10)00138-4}}</ref> Low sexual desire can also be a side effect of various medications. In the case of acquired/situational HSDD, possible causes include intimacy difficulty, relationship problems, sexual addiction, and chronic illness of the man's partner. The evidence for these is somewhat in question. Some claimed causes of low sexual desire are based on empirical evidence. However, some are based merely on clinical observation.<ref name="Maurice07">{{cite book |author=Maurice, William |chapter=Sexual Desire Disorders in Men |editor=Leiblum, Sandra |title=Principles and Practice of Sex Therapy |publisher=The Guilford Press |location=New York |year=2007 |edition=4th }}</ref> In many cases, the cause of HSDD is simply unknown.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Balon, Richard |title=Toward an Improved Nosology of Sexual Dysfunction in DSM-V |journal=Psychiatric Times |volume=24 |issue=9 |year=2007 |url=http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/display/article/10168/53716?pageNumber=1}}</ref>
    In 1948 and 1953 Dr. Alfred Kinsey added a category "X" to the Kinsey scale, indicating those with "no socio-sexual contacts or reactions.”<ref>Kinsey, Alfred C. (1948). Sexual Behavior in the Human Male. W.B. Saunders. ISBN 0-253-33412-8</ref><ref>Kinsey, Alfred C. (1953). Sexual Behavior in the Human Female. W. B. Saunders ISBN 025333411X</ref>


    There are some factors that are believed to be possible causes of HSDD in women. As with men, various medical problems, psychiatric problems (such as mood disorders), or increased amounts of prolactin can cause HSDD. Other hormones are believed to be involved as well. Additionally, factors such as relationship problems or stress are believed to be possible causes of reduced sexual desire in women. According to one recent study examining the affective responses and attentional capture of sexual stimuli in women with and without HSDD, women with HSDD do not appear to have a negative association to sexual stimuli, but rather a weaker positive association than women without HSDD.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Brauer M, van leeuwen M, Janssen E, Newhouse SK, Heiman JR, Laan E |title=Attentional and Affective Processing of Sexual Stimuli in Women with Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder |journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior |date=September 2011 |doi=10.1007/s10508-011-9820-7|url=http://www.springerlink.com/content/w688825666612563/ |volume=41 |issue=4 |pages=891–905 |pmid=21892693}}</ref>
    In a study published in 1983 Paula Nurius examined the relationship between mental health and sexual orientation. The study focused on heterosexuality and homosexuality but had options for bisexual and asexual<ref>Nurius, Paula. (1983). "Mental Health Implications of Sexual Orientation" The Journal of Sex Research 19 (2) pp.119-136.</ref>.


    ==Diagnosis==
    One of the first instances of an asexual community on the internet was the comment of a 1997 article by Zoe O'Reilly and published by StarNet Dispatches, entitled ''"My Life as a Human Amoeba"''<ref>http://web.archive.org/web/20030210212218/http://dispatches.azstarnet.com/zoe/amoeba.htm</ref>''. ''On October 12, 2000 the Yahoo e-mail group "Haven for the Human Amoeba (HHA)" was founded<ref>http://wiki.asexuality.org/Haven_for_the_Human_Amoeba</ref>.
    In the DSM-5, male hypoactive sexual desire disorder is characterized by "persistently or recurrently deficient (or absent) sexual/erotic thoughts or fantasies and desire for sexual activity", as judged by a clinician with consideration for the patient's age and cultural context.<ref name="DSM5male" /> Female sexual interest/arousal disorder is defined as a "lack of, or significantly reduced, sexual interest/arousal", manifesting as at least three of the following symptoms: no or little interest in sexual activity, no or few sexual thoughts, no or few attempts to initiate sexual activity or respond to partner's initiation, no or little sexual pleasure/excitement in 75–100% of sexual experiences, no or little sexual interest in internal or external erotic stimuli, and no or few genital/nongenital sensations in 75–100% of sexual experiences.<ref name="DSM5female" />


    For both diagnoses, symptoms must persist for at least six months, cause clinically significant distress, and not be better explained by another condition. Simply having lower desire than one's partner is not sufficient for a diagnosis. Self-identification of a lifelong lack of sexual desire as asexuality precludes diagnosis.<ref name="DSM5male" /><ref name="DSM5female" />
    The founder of the group, David Jay, later made a page on his university webspace in March 2001. It was originally going to be called the Human Asexual Visibility and Education Network (HAVEN), but was shortened to the Asexual Visibility and Education Network (AVEN). However, at the time it's purpose was mostly to define asexuality and to collect the e-mail address of those who wished to join the e-mail group. As the membership of the Haven for the Human Amoeba increased there was an increased demand for a website on asexuality with a better structure. Several websites popped up, each with different views of asexuality. AVEN was restructured, hoping to be a more inclusive option for all asexuals. On May 29, 2002, the AVEN forum was started. One day later AVEN changed its domain name to asexuality.org. It soon became the most popular website for asexuals.


    ==Treatment==
    == Asexuality in the DSM ==
    The DSM-5 and ICD-10 currently define asexuality as a disorder. The diagnosis has gone under several name changes, the current names being
    * DSM-5 — Female sexual interest/arousal disorder, Male hypoactive sexual desire disorder
    * ICD-10 — Hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD)
    In 2013, the DSM-5 was published. Female Sexual Interest/Arousal Disorder and Male Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder remain listed as disorders, but their criteria exclude individuals who self-identify as asexual<ref>http://www.asexualityarchive.com/asexuality-in-the-dsm-5/</ref>.


    ===Counseling===
    == Flag and Symbols ==
    HSDD, like many sexual dysfunctions, is something that people are treated for in the context of a relationship. Theoretically, one could be diagnosed with, and treated for, HSDD without being in a relationship. However, relationship status is the most predictive factor accounting for distress in women with low desire and distress is required for a diagnosis of HSDD.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Rosen RC, Shifren JL, Monz BU, Odom DM, Russo PA, Johannes CB |title=Correlates of sexually-related personal distress in women with low sexual desire |journal=Journal of Sexual Medicine |volume=6 |issue=6 |pages=1549–1560 |date=June 2009 |doi=10.1111/j.1743-6109.2009.01252.x|pmid=19473457 }}</ref> Therefore, it is common for both partners to be involved in therapy. Typically, the therapist tries to find a psychological or biological cause of the HSDD. If the HSDD is organically caused, the clinician may try to treat it. If the clinician believes it is rooted in a psychological problem, they may recommend therapy. If not, treatment generally focuses more on relationship and communication issues, improved communication (verbal and nonverbal), working on non-sexual intimacy, or education about sexuality may all be possible parts of treatment. Sometimes problems occur because people have unrealistic perceptions about what normal sexuality is and are concerned that they do not compare well to that, and this is one reason why education can be important. If the clinician thinks that part of the problem is a result of stress, techniques may be recommended to more effectively deal with that. Also, it can be important to understand why the low level of sexual desire is a problem for the relationship because the two partners may associate different meanings with sex but not know it.<ref name="Basson07">{{cite book |author=Basson, Rosemary |chapter=Sexual Desire/Arousal Disorders in Women |editor=Leiblum, Sandra |title=Principles and Practice of Sex Therapy |publisher=The Guilford Press |location=New York |year=2007 |edition=4th }}</ref>
    In the summer of 2010 AVEN and several other asexual websites held a contest to design an asexual flag. The current asexual flag was designed by the AVEN user Standup and was uploaded on June 30th, 2010<ref>https://asexualagenda.wordpress.com/2018/02/21/the-ace-flag-a-history-and-celebration/</ref>. Stripes represent the following: black for asexuals, grey for [[Greyasexual|greyasexauls]] and [[Demisexual|demisexuals]], white for [[Allosexual|allosexuals]], and purple for community.
    [[File:Aventriangle.jpg|thumb|220x220px|The AVEN triangle.]]
    The asexual community has many other symbols that represent asexuality. Purple was assossited with asexuality long before the flag, because that is the color of the AVEN website. Another common symbol is a spade, particularly the ace of spade, do to the fact that asexual is often shortened to ace, and because a spade is seen as the opposite of a heart in a deck of cards. Another symbol is a black ring worn on the middle finger of the right hand, used to subtly identify oneself as asexual is public. Cake is an informal symbol of asexuality, originating from a joke that asexuals would rather eat cake than have sex. An older asexual symbol is the AVEN triangle which was most commonly used before the asexual flag was made.


    In the case of men, the therapy may depend on the subtype of HSDD. Increasing the level of sexual desire of a man with lifelong/generalized HSDD is unlikely. Instead the focus may be on helping the couple to adapt. In the case of acquired/generalized, it is likely that there is some biological reason for it and the clinician may attempt to deal with that. In the case of acquired/situational, some form of psychotherapy may be used, possibly with the man alone and possibly together with his partner.<ref name="Maurice07" />
    == Etymology ==
    The term asexual uses the Latin prefix a- which means 'a lack of'. Sexual refers to sexual attraction.


    ===Medication===
    Asexual is also a biology term, used to describe plants and some animals that can reproduce without a partner, by creating a genetic copy of themselves.


    == Resources ==
    ====Approved====
    Flibanserin was the first medication approved by the FDA for the treatment of HSDD in pre-menopausal women. Its approval was controversial and a systematic review found its benefits to be marginal.<ref name="JAMA2016">{{cite journal|last1=Jaspers|first1=L|last2=Feys|first2=F|last3=Bramer|first3=WM|last4=Franco|first4=OH|last5=Leusink|first5=P|last6=Laan|first6=ET|title=Efficacy and Safety of Flibanserin for the Treatment of Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder in Women: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.|journal=JAMA Internal Medicine|date=1 April 2016|volume=176|issue=4|pages=453–62|pmid=26927498|doi=10.1001/jamainternmed.2015.8565}}</ref> The second medication to be approved by the FDA for this indication was bremelanotide, approved June 2019.<ref name="Frellick">{{cite web |last1=Frellick |first1=Marcia |title=FDA Approves New Libido-Boosting Drug for Premenopausal Women |url=https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/914779?nlid=130327_3901&src=wnl_newsalrt_190621_MSCPEDIT&uac=194606CT&impID=2003265&faf=1 |website=Medscape |publisher=WebMD LLC |accessdate=22 June 2019}}</ref>
    <references />

    [[Category:Sexuality]]
    ====Off-label====
    [[Category:Ace-spec identity]]
    A few studies suggest that the antidepressant, bupropion, can improve sexual function in women who are not depressed, if they have HSDD.<ref name="Foley_2006">{{cite journal |vauthors=Foley KF, DeSanty KP, Kast RE | title = Bupropion: pharmacology and therapeutic applications | journal = Expert Rev Neurother | volume = 6 | issue = 9 | pages = 1249–65 |date=September 2006 | pmid = 17009913 | doi = 10.1586/14737175.6.9.1249 }}</ref> The same is true for the anxiolytic, buspirone, which is a 5-HT<sub>1A</sub> receptor agonist similarly to flibanserin.<ref name="pmid26535760">{{cite journal | vauthors = Howland RH | title = Buspirone: Back to the Future | journal = J Psychosoc Nurs Ment Health Serv | volume = 53 | issue = 11 | pages = 21–4 | year = 2015 | pmid = 26535760 | doi = 10.3928/02793695-20151022-01 | url = }}</ref>

    Testosterone supplementation is effective in the short-term.<ref name="Wie2014" /> However, its long-term safety is unclear.<ref name="Wie2014">{{cite journal|last1=Wierman|first1=ME|last2=Arlt|first2=W|last3=Basson|first3=R|last4=Davis|first4=SR|last5=Miller|first5=KK|last6=Murad|first6=MH|last7=Rosner|first7=W|last8=Santoro|first8=N|title=Androgen therapy in women: a reappraisal: an endocrine society clinical practice guideline.|journal=The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism|date=Oct 2014|volume=99|issue=10|pages=3489–510|pmid=25279570|doi=10.1210/jc.2014-2260}}</ref>

    ==History==
    The term "frigid" to describe sexual dysfunction derives from medieval and early modern canonical texts about witchcraft. It was thought that witches could put spells on men to make them incapable of erections.<ref>Peter Cryle and Alison Moore, ''Frigidity: An Intellectual History''. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011. {{ISBN|978-0-230-30345-4}}.</ref> Only in the early nineteenth century were women first described as "frigid", and a vast literature exists on what was considered a serious problem if a women did not desire sex with her husband. Many medical texts between 1800-1930 focused on women's frigidity, considering it a sexual pathology.<ref>Peter Cyle and Alison Moore, Frigidity at the Fin-de-Siècle, a Slippery and Capacious Concept, ''Journal of the History of Sexuality'' 19 (2) May 2010, 243-261.</ref>

    The French psychoanalyst, Princess Marie Bonaparte, theorized about frigidity and considered herself to suffer from it.<ref>Relocating Marie Bonaparte’s Clitoris. Australian Feminist Studies 24 (60), April 2009, 149-165.</ref> In the early versions of the DSM, there were only two sexual dysfunctions listed: frigidity (for women) and impotence (for men).

    In 1970, Masters and Johnson published their book ''Human Sexual Inadequacy''<ref>{{cite book |author1=Masters, William |author2=Johnson, Virginia |title=Human Sexual Inadequacy |publisher=Little Brown |location=Boston |year=1970 }}</ref> describing sexual dysfunctions, though these included only dysfunctions dealing with the function of genitals such as premature ejaculation and impotence for men, and anorgasmia and vaginismus for women. Prior to Masters and Johnson's research, female orgasm was assumed by some to originate primarily from vaginal, rather than clitoral, stimulation. Consequently, feminists have argued that "frigidity" was "defined by men as the failure of women to have vaginal orgasms".<ref>{{cite book |author=Koedt, A. |chapter=The myth of the vaginal orgasm |editor=Escoffier, J. |title=Sexual revolution |publisher=Thunder's Mouth Press |location=New York |year=1970 |isbn=978-1-56025-525-3 |pages=100–9 }}</ref>

    Following this book, sex therapy increased throughout the 1970s. Reports from sex-therapists about people with low sexual desire are reported from at least 1972, but labeling this as a specific disorder did not occur until 1977.<ref>{{cite book |last=Irvine |first=Janice |title=Disorders of Desire |publisher=Temple University Press |location=Philadelphia |year=2005 |page=265 |ref=harv }}</ref> In that year, sex therapists Helen Singer Kaplan and Harold Lief independently of each other proposed creating a specific category for people with low or no sexual desire. Lief named it "inhibited sexual desire", and Kaplan named it "hypoactive sexual desire". The primary motivation for this was that previous models for sex therapy assumed certain levels of sexual interest in one's partner and that problems were only caused by abnormal functioning/non-functioning of the genitals or performance anxiety but that therapies based on those problems were ineffective for people who did not sexually desire their partner.<ref>{{cite book |last=Kaplan |first=Helen Singer |title=The Sexual Desire Disorders |publisher=Taylor & Francis Group |location=New York |year=1995 |pages=1–2, 7 |ref=harv }}</ref> The following year, 1978, Lief and Kaplan together made a proposal to the APA's taskforce for sexual disorders for the DSM III, of which Kaplan and Lief were both members. The diagnosis of Inhibited Sexual Desire (ISD) was added to the DSM when the 3rd edition was published in 1980.<ref>{{harvnb|Kaplan|1995|pp=7–8}}</ref>

    For understanding this diagnosis, it is important to recognize the social context in which it was created. In some cultures, low sexual desire may be considered normal and high sexual desire is problematic. For example, sexual desire may be lower in East Asian populations than Euro-Canadian/American populations.<ref name="Brotto LA, Chik HM, Ryder AG, Gorzalka BB, Seal B 2005 613–626">{{cite journal |vauthors=Brotto LA, Chik HM, Ryder AG, Gorzalka BB, Seal B |title=Acculturation and sexual function in Asian women |journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior |volume=34 |issue=6 |pages=613–626 |date=December 2005 |doi=10.1007/s10508-005-7909-6 |pmid=16362246 |url=http://www.springerlink.com/content/7110535123451813/}}</ref> In other cultures, this may be reversed. Some cultures try hard to restrain sexual desire. Others try to excite it. Concepts of "normal" levels of sexual desire are culturally dependent and rarely value-neutral. In the 1970s, there were strong cultural messages that sex is good for you and "the more the better". Within this context, people who were habitually uninterested in sex, who in previous times may not have seen this as a problem, were more likely to feel that this was a situation that needed to be fixed. They may have felt alienated by dominant messages about sexuality and increasingly people went to sex-therapists complaining of low sexual desire. It was within this context that the diagnosis of ISD was created.<ref>{{cite book |author1=Leiblum, Sandra |author2=Rosen, Raymond |title=Sexual Desire Disorders |publisher=The Guilford Press |year=1988 |page=1 }}</ref>

    In the revision of the DSM-III, published in 1987 (DSM-III-R), ISD was subdivided into two categories: Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder and Sexual Aversion Disorder (SAD).<ref>{{harvnb|Irvine|2005|p=172}}</ref> The former is a lack of interest in sex and the latter is a phobic aversion to sex. In addition to this subdivision, one reason for the change is that the committee involved in revising the psychosexual disorders for the DSM-III-R thought that term "inhibited" suggests psychodynamic cause (i.e. that the conditions for sexual desire are present, but the person is, for some reason, inhibiting their own sexual interest.) The term "hypoactive sexual desire" is more awkward, but more neutral with respect to the cause.<ref>{{cite book |author=Apfelbaum, Bernard |chapter=An Ego Analytic Perspective on Desire Disorders |editor1=Lieblum, Sandra |editor2=Rosen, Raymond |title=Sexual Desire Disorders |publisher=The Guilford Press |year=1988 }}</ref> The DSM-III-R estimated that about 20% of the population had HSDD.<ref>American Psychological Association (1987)</ref> In the DSM-IV (1994), the criterion that the diagnosis requires "marked distress or interpersonal difficulty" was added.

    The DSM-5, published in 2013, split HSDD into ''male hypoactive sexual desire disorder'' and ''female sexual interest/arousal disorder''. The distinction was made because men report more intense and frequent sexual desire than women.<ref name="DSM5male" /> According to Lori Brotto, this classification is desirable compared to the DSM-IV classification system because: (1) it reflects the finding that desire and arousal tend to overlap (2) it differentiates between women who lack desire before the onset of activity, but who are receptive to initiation and or initiate sexual activity for reasons other than desire, and women who never experience sexual arousal (3) it takes the variability in sexual desire into account. Furthermore, the criterion of 6 symptoms be present for a diagnosis helps safeguard against pathologizing adaptive decreases in desire.<ref name="Brotto LA 2010 221–239">{{cite journal |author=Brotto LA |title=The DSM Diagnostic Criteria for Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder in Women |journal= Archives of Sexual Behavior |volume=39 |issue=2 |pages=221–239 |year=2010 |doi=10.1007/s10508-009-9543-1 |url=http://www.springerlink.com/content/r263073710m04123/ |pmid=19777334}}</ref><ref name="Brotto LA 2010 2015–2030">{{cite journal |author=Brotto LA |title=The DSM Diagnostic Criteria for Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder in Men |journal= Archives of Sexual Behavior |volume=7 |issue=6 |pages=2015–2030 |date=June 2010 |doi=10.1111/j.1743-6109.2010.01860.x |pmid=20929517 }}</ref>

    ==Criticism==
    ===General===
    HSDD, as currently defined by the DSM has come under criticism of the social function of the diagnosis.
    *HSDD could be seen as part of a history of the medicalization of sexuality by the medical profession to define normal sexuality.<ref>{{harvnb|Irvine|2005|pp=175–6}}</ref> It has also been examined within a "broader frame of historical interest in the problematization of sexual appetite".<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Flore|first1=Jacinthe|title=The problem of sexual imbalance and techniques of the self in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders|journal=History of Psychiatry|date=2016|volume=27|issue=3|pages=320–335|doi=10.1177/0957154X16644391|pmid=27118809}}</ref>
    *HSDD has been criticized over pathologizing normal variations in sexuality because the parameters of normality are unclear.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Flore|first1=Jacinthe|title=HSDD and asexuality: a question of instruments|journal=Psychology & Sexuality|date=2013|volume=4|issue=2|pages=152–166|doi=10.1080/19419899.2013.774163}}</ref> This lack of clarity is partly due to the fact that the terms "persistent" and "recurrent" do not have clear operational definitions.<ref name="Brotto LA, Chik HM, Ryder AG, Gorzalka BB, Seal B 2005 613–626" />

    Other criticisms focus more on scientific and clinical issues.
    *HSDD is such a diverse group of conditions with many causes that it functions as little more than a starting place for clinicians to assess people.<ref name="Bancroft01">{{cite journal |vauthors=Bancroft J, Graham CA, McCord C |title=Conceptualizing women's sexual problems |journal=J Sex Marital Ther |volume=27 |issue=2 |pages=95–103 |year=2001 |pmid=11247236 |doi=10.1080/00926230152051716 }}</ref>
    *The requirement that low sexual desire causes distress or interpersonal difficulty has been criticized. It has been claimed that it is not clinically useful because if it is not causing any problems, the person will not seek out a clinician.<ref name="Bancroft01" /> One could claim that this criterion (for all of the sexual dysfunctions, including HSDD) decreases the scientific validity of the diagnoses or is a cover-up for a lack of data on what constitutes normal sexual function.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Althof SE |title=My personal distress over the inclusion of personal distress |journal=J Sex Marital Ther |volume=27 |issue=2 |pages=123–5 |year=2001 |pmid=11247205 |doi=10.1080/00926230152051761 }}</ref>
    *The distress requirement is also criticized because the term "distress" lacks a clear definition.<ref name="Bancroft J, Graham CA, McCord C 2001 95–103">{{cite journal |vauthors=Bancroft J, Graham CA, McCord C |title=Conceptualizing Women's Sexual Problems |journal=Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy |volume=27 |issue=2 |pages=95–103 |year=2001 |pmid=11247236 |doi=10.1080/00926230152051716 |url=http://ukpmc.ac.uk/abstract/MED/11247236/reload=0;jsessionid=KCiKJtVme61vM1EzfD2U.22}}</ref>

    ===DSM-IV criteria===
    Prior to the publication of the DSM-5, the DSM-IV criteria were criticized on several grounds. It was suggested that a duration criterion should be added because lack of interest in sex over the past month is significantly more common than lack of interest lasting six months.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Mitchell KR, Mercer CH |title=Prevalence of Low Sexual Desire among Women in Britain: Associated Factors |journal=The Journal of Sexual Medicine |volume=6 |issue=9 |pages=2434–2444 |date=September 2009 |doi=10.1111/j.1743-6109.2009.01368.x|pmid=19549088}}</ref> Similarly, a frequency criterion (i.e., the symptoms of low desire be present in 75% or more of sexual encounters) has been suggested.<ref name="Balon R 2008 186–97">{{cite journal |author=Balon R |title=The DSM Criteria of Sexual Dysfunction: Need for a Change |journal= Journal of Sex and Marital Therapy |volume=34 |issue=3 |pages=186–97 |year=2008 |pmid= 18398759 |doi=10.1080/00926230701866067 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Segraves R, Balon R, Clayton A |title=Proposal for Changes in Diagnostic Criteria for Sexual Dysfunctions |journal= Journal of Sexual Medicine |volume=4 |issue=3 |pages=567–580 |year=2007 |doi=10.1111/j.1743-6109.2007.00455.x |pmid=17433086}}</ref>

    The current framework for HSDD is based on a linear model of human sexual response, developed by Masters and Johnson and modified by Kaplan consisting of desire, arousal, orgasm. The sexual dysfunctions in the DSM are based around problems at any one or more of these stages.<ref name="Basson07" /> Many of the criticisms of the DSM-IV framework for sexual dysfunction in general, and HSDD in particular, claimed that this model ignored the differences between male and female sexuality. Several criticisms were based on inadequacy of the DSM-IV framework for dealing with female's sexual problems.

    *Increasingly, evidence shows that there are significant differences between male and female sexuality. Level of desire is highly variable from female to female and there are some females who are considered sexually functional who have no active desire for sex, but they can erotically respond well in contexts they find acceptable. This has been termed "responsive desire" as opposed to spontaneous desire.<ref name="Basson07" />
    *The focus on merely the physiological ignores the social, economic and political factors including sexual violence and lack of access to sexual medicine or education throughout the world affecting females and their sexual health.<ref name="Tiefer02">{{cite journal |vauthors=Tiefer L, Hall M, Tavris C |title=Beyond dysfunction: a new view of women's sexual problems |journal=J Sex Marital Ther |volume=28 |issue=Suppl 1|pages=225–32 |year=2002 |pmid=11898706 |doi=10.1080/00926230252851357 }}</ref>
    *The focus on the physiological ignores the relationship context of sexuality despite the fact that these are often the cause of sexual problems.<ref name="Tiefer02" />
    *The focus on discrepancy in desire between two partners may result in the partner with the lower level of desire being labeled as "dysfunctional," but the problem really sits with difference between the two partners.<ref name="Bancroft J, Graham CA, McCord C 2001 95–103" /> However, within couples the assessment of desire tends to be relative. That is, individuals make judgments by comparing their levels of desire to that of their partner.<ref name="Balon R 2008 186–97" />
    *The sexual problems that females complain of often do not fit well into the DSM-IV framework for sexual dysfunctions.<ref name="Tiefer02" />
    *The DSM-IV system of sub-typing may be more applicable to one sex than the other.<ref name="Maurice07" />
    *Research indicates a high degree of comorbidity between HSDD and female sexual arousal disorder. Therefore, a diagnosis combining the two (as the DSM-5 eventually did) might be more appropriate.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Graham, CA |title=The DSM Diagnostic Criteria for Female Sexual Arousal Disorder |journal=Archives of Sexual Behavior |volume=39 |issue=2 |pages=240–255 |date=September 2010 |doi=10.1007/s10508-009-9535-1 |url=http://www.springerlink.com/content/a3393180w1x47539/ |pmid=19777335}}</ref>

    ==References==
    {{Reflist}}

    ==Further reading==
    * Peter Cryle and Alison Moore, ''Frigidity: An Intellectual History''. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011. {{ISBN|978-0-230-30345-4}}.
    * Peter Cryle and Alison Moore, Frigidity at the Fin-de-Siècle, a Slippery and Capacious Concept, ''Journal of the History of Sexuality'' 19 (2) May 2010, 243-261.
    * Alison Moore, Frigidity, Gender and Power in French Cultural History – From Jean Fauconney to Marie Bonaparte. ''French Cultural Studies''20 (4), November 2009, 331-349.
    * Alison Moore, The Invention of the Unsexual: Situating Frigidity in the History of Sexuality and in Feminist Thought. ''French History and Civilization'' 2 (2009), 181-192.
    * {{cite journal |last=Montgomery |first=KA |title=Sexual Desire Disorders |journal=Psychiatry (Edgmont) |date=Jun 2008 |volume=5 |issue=6 |pages=50–55 |pmc=2695750 |pmid=19727285}}
    * {{cite journal |last1=Basson |first1=R |last2=Leiblum |first2=S |last3=Brotto |first3=L |last4=Derogatis |first4=L |last5=Fourcroy |first5=J |last6=Fugl-Meyer |first6=K |last7=Graziottin |first7=A |last8=Heiman |first8=JR |last9=Laan |first9=E |last10=Meston |first10=C |last11=Schover |first11=L |last12=van Lankveld |first12=J |last13=Schultz |first13=WW |title=Definitions of women's sexual dysfunction reconsidered: advocating expansion and revision. |journal=Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics and Gynaecology |date=Dec 2003 |volume=24 |issue=4 |pages=221–9 |pmid=14702882 |doi=10.3109/01674820309074686}}
    * {{cite journal |last=Warnock |first=JJ |title=Female hypoactive sexual desire disorder: epidemiology, diagnosis and treatment. |journal=CNS Drugs |year=2002 |volume=16 |issue=11 |pages=745–53 |pmid=12383030 |doi=10.2165/00023210-200216110-00003}}
    * {{cite journal |last=Basson |first=R |title=Women's sexual dysfunction: revised and expanded definitions |journal=Canadian Medical Association Journal |date=10 May 2005 |volume=172 |issue=10 |pages=1327–1333 |doi=10.1503/cmaj.1020174 |pmc=557105 |pmid=15883409}}
    * {{cite journal |last=Nappi |first=RE |author2=Wawra, K |author3=Schmitt, S |title=Hypoactive sexual desire disorder in postmenopausal women. |journal=Gynecological Endocrinology |date=Jun 2006 |volume=22 |issue=6 |pages=318–23 |pmid=16785156 |doi=10.1080/09513590600762265}}

    Revision as of 11:51, 24 July 2019

    The asexual flag.

    Hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD) or inhibited sexual desire (ISD) is considered a sexual dysfunction and is characterized as a lack or absence of sexual fantasies and desire for sexual activity, as judged by a clinician. For this to be regarded as a disorder, it must cause marked distress or interpersonal difficulties and not be better accounted for by another mental disorder, a drug (legal or illegal), or some other medical condition. A person with ISD will not start, or respond to their partner's desire for, sexual activity.[1]

    There are various subtypes. HSDD can be general (general lack of sexual desire) or situational (still has sexual desire, but lacks sexual desire for current partner), and it can be acquired (HSDD started after a period of normal sexual functioning) or lifelong (the person has always had no/low sexual desire.)

    In the DSM-5, HSDD was split into male hypoactive sexual desire disorder[2] and female sexual interest/arousal disorder.[3] It was first included in the DSM-III under the name inhibited sexual desire disorder,[4] but the name was changed in the DSM-III-R. Other terms used to describe the phenomenon include sexual aversion and sexual apathy.[1] More informal or colloquial terms are frigidity and frigidness.[5]

    Causes

    Low sexual desire alone is not equivalent to HSDD because of the requirement in HSDD that the low sexual desire causes marked distress and interpersonal difficulty and because of the requirement that the low desire is not better accounted for by another disorder in the DSM or by a general medical problem. It is therefore difficult to say exactly what causes HSDD. It is easier to describe, instead, some of the causes of low sexual desire.

    In men, though there are theoretically more types of HSDD/low sexual desire, typically men are only diagnosed with one of three subtypes.

    • Lifelong/generalised: The man has little or no desire for sexual stimulation (with a partner or alone) and never had.
    • Acquired/generalised: The man previously had sexual interest in his present partner, but lacks interest in sexual activity, partnered or solitary.
    • Acquired/situational: The man was previously sexually interested in his present partner but now lacks sexual interest in this partner but has desire for sexual stimulation (i.e. alone or with someone other than his present partner.)

    Though it can sometimes be difficult to distinguish between these types, they do not necessarily have the same cause. The cause of lifelong/generalized HSDD is unknown. In the case of acquired/generalized low sexual desire, possible causes include various medical/health problems, psychiatric problems, low levels of testosterone or high levels of prolactin. One theory suggests that sexual desire is controlled by a balance between inhibitory and excitatory factors.[6] This is thought to be expressed via neurotransmitters in selective brain areas. A decrease in sexual desire may therefore be due to an imbalance between neurotransmitters with excitatory activity like dopamine and norepinephrine and neurotransmitters with inhibitory activity, like serotonin.[7] Low sexual desire can also be a side effect of various medications. In the case of acquired/situational HSDD, possible causes include intimacy difficulty, relationship problems, sexual addiction, and chronic illness of the man's partner. The evidence for these is somewhat in question. Some claimed causes of low sexual desire are based on empirical evidence. However, some are based merely on clinical observation.[8] In many cases, the cause of HSDD is simply unknown.[9]

    There are some factors that are believed to be possible causes of HSDD in women. As with men, various medical problems, psychiatric problems (such as mood disorders), or increased amounts of prolactin can cause HSDD. Other hormones are believed to be involved as well. Additionally, factors such as relationship problems or stress are believed to be possible causes of reduced sexual desire in women. According to one recent study examining the affective responses and attentional capture of sexual stimuli in women with and without HSDD, women with HSDD do not appear to have a negative association to sexual stimuli, but rather a weaker positive association than women without HSDD.[10]

    Diagnosis

    In the DSM-5, male hypoactive sexual desire disorder is characterized by "persistently or recurrently deficient (or absent) sexual/erotic thoughts or fantasies and desire for sexual activity", as judged by a clinician with consideration for the patient's age and cultural context.[2] Female sexual interest/arousal disorder is defined as a "lack of, or significantly reduced, sexual interest/arousal", manifesting as at least three of the following symptoms: no or little interest in sexual activity, no or few sexual thoughts, no or few attempts to initiate sexual activity or respond to partner's initiation, no or little sexual pleasure/excitement in 75–100% of sexual experiences, no or little sexual interest in internal or external erotic stimuli, and no or few genital/nongenital sensations in 75–100% of sexual experiences.[3]

    For both diagnoses, symptoms must persist for at least six months, cause clinically significant distress, and not be better explained by another condition. Simply having lower desire than one's partner is not sufficient for a diagnosis. Self-identification of a lifelong lack of sexual desire as asexuality precludes diagnosis.[2][3]

    Treatment

    Counseling

    HSDD, like many sexual dysfunctions, is something that people are treated for in the context of a relationship. Theoretically, one could be diagnosed with, and treated for, HSDD without being in a relationship. However, relationship status is the most predictive factor accounting for distress in women with low desire and distress is required for a diagnosis of HSDD.[11] Therefore, it is common for both partners to be involved in therapy. Typically, the therapist tries to find a psychological or biological cause of the HSDD. If the HSDD is organically caused, the clinician may try to treat it. If the clinician believes it is rooted in a psychological problem, they may recommend therapy. If not, treatment generally focuses more on relationship and communication issues, improved communication (verbal and nonverbal), working on non-sexual intimacy, or education about sexuality may all be possible parts of treatment. Sometimes problems occur because people have unrealistic perceptions about what normal sexuality is and are concerned that they do not compare well to that, and this is one reason why education can be important. If the clinician thinks that part of the problem is a result of stress, techniques may be recommended to more effectively deal with that. Also, it can be important to understand why the low level of sexual desire is a problem for the relationship because the two partners may associate different meanings with sex but not know it.[12]

    In the case of men, the therapy may depend on the subtype of HSDD. Increasing the level of sexual desire of a man with lifelong/generalized HSDD is unlikely. Instead the focus may be on helping the couple to adapt. In the case of acquired/generalized, it is likely that there is some biological reason for it and the clinician may attempt to deal with that. In the case of acquired/situational, some form of psychotherapy may be used, possibly with the man alone and possibly together with his partner.[8]

    Medication

    Approved

    Flibanserin was the first medication approved by the FDA for the treatment of HSDD in pre-menopausal women. Its approval was controversial and a systematic review found its benefits to be marginal.[13] The second medication to be approved by the FDA for this indication was bremelanotide, approved June 2019.[14]

    Off-label

    A few studies suggest that the antidepressant, bupropion, can improve sexual function in women who are not depressed, if they have HSDD.[15] The same is true for the anxiolytic, buspirone, which is a 5-HT1A receptor agonist similarly to flibanserin.[16]

    Testosterone supplementation is effective in the short-term.[17] However, its long-term safety is unclear.[17]

    History

    The term "frigid" to describe sexual dysfunction derives from medieval and early modern canonical texts about witchcraft. It was thought that witches could put spells on men to make them incapable of erections.[18] Only in the early nineteenth century were women first described as "frigid", and a vast literature exists on what was considered a serious problem if a women did not desire sex with her husband. Many medical texts between 1800-1930 focused on women's frigidity, considering it a sexual pathology.[19]

    The French psychoanalyst, Princess Marie Bonaparte, theorized about frigidity and considered herself to suffer from it.[20] In the early versions of the DSM, there were only two sexual dysfunctions listed: frigidity (for women) and impotence (for men).

    In 1970, Masters and Johnson published their book Human Sexual Inadequacy[21] describing sexual dysfunctions, though these included only dysfunctions dealing with the function of genitals such as premature ejaculation and impotence for men, and anorgasmia and vaginismus for women. Prior to Masters and Johnson's research, female orgasm was assumed by some to originate primarily from vaginal, rather than clitoral, stimulation. Consequently, feminists have argued that "frigidity" was "defined by men as the failure of women to have vaginal orgasms".[22]

    Following this book, sex therapy increased throughout the 1970s. Reports from sex-therapists about people with low sexual desire are reported from at least 1972, but labeling this as a specific disorder did not occur until 1977.[23] In that year, sex therapists Helen Singer Kaplan and Harold Lief independently of each other proposed creating a specific category for people with low or no sexual desire. Lief named it "inhibited sexual desire", and Kaplan named it "hypoactive sexual desire". The primary motivation for this was that previous models for sex therapy assumed certain levels of sexual interest in one's partner and that problems were only caused by abnormal functioning/non-functioning of the genitals or performance anxiety but that therapies based on those problems were ineffective for people who did not sexually desire their partner.[24] The following year, 1978, Lief and Kaplan together made a proposal to the APA's taskforce for sexual disorders for the DSM III, of which Kaplan and Lief were both members. The diagnosis of Inhibited Sexual Desire (ISD) was added to the DSM when the 3rd edition was published in 1980.[25]

    For understanding this diagnosis, it is important to recognize the social context in which it was created. In some cultures, low sexual desire may be considered normal and high sexual desire is problematic. For example, sexual desire may be lower in East Asian populations than Euro-Canadian/American populations.[26] In other cultures, this may be reversed. Some cultures try hard to restrain sexual desire. Others try to excite it. Concepts of "normal" levels of sexual desire are culturally dependent and rarely value-neutral. In the 1970s, there were strong cultural messages that sex is good for you and "the more the better". Within this context, people who were habitually uninterested in sex, who in previous times may not have seen this as a problem, were more likely to feel that this was a situation that needed to be fixed. They may have felt alienated by dominant messages about sexuality and increasingly people went to sex-therapists complaining of low sexual desire. It was within this context that the diagnosis of ISD was created.[27]

    In the revision of the DSM-III, published in 1987 (DSM-III-R), ISD was subdivided into two categories: Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder and Sexual Aversion Disorder (SAD).[28] The former is a lack of interest in sex and the latter is a phobic aversion to sex. In addition to this subdivision, one reason for the change is that the committee involved in revising the psychosexual disorders for the DSM-III-R thought that term "inhibited" suggests psychodynamic cause (i.e. that the conditions for sexual desire are present, but the person is, for some reason, inhibiting their own sexual interest.) The term "hypoactive sexual desire" is more awkward, but more neutral with respect to the cause.[29] The DSM-III-R estimated that about 20% of the population had HSDD.[30] In the DSM-IV (1994), the criterion that the diagnosis requires "marked distress or interpersonal difficulty" was added.

    The DSM-5, published in 2013, split HSDD into male hypoactive sexual desire disorder and female sexual interest/arousal disorder. The distinction was made because men report more intense and frequent sexual desire than women.[2] According to Lori Brotto, this classification is desirable compared to the DSM-IV classification system because: (1) it reflects the finding that desire and arousal tend to overlap (2) it differentiates between women who lack desire before the onset of activity, but who are receptive to initiation and or initiate sexual activity for reasons other than desire, and women who never experience sexual arousal (3) it takes the variability in sexual desire into account. Furthermore, the criterion of 6 symptoms be present for a diagnosis helps safeguard against pathologizing adaptive decreases in desire.[31][32]

    Criticism

    General

    HSDD, as currently defined by the DSM has come under criticism of the social function of the diagnosis.

    • HSDD could be seen as part of a history of the medicalization of sexuality by the medical profession to define normal sexuality.[33] It has also been examined within a "broader frame of historical interest in the problematization of sexual appetite".[34]
    • HSDD has been criticized over pathologizing normal variations in sexuality because the parameters of normality are unclear.[35] This lack of clarity is partly due to the fact that the terms "persistent" and "recurrent" do not have clear operational definitions.[26]

    Other criticisms focus more on scientific and clinical issues.

    • HSDD is such a diverse group of conditions with many causes that it functions as little more than a starting place for clinicians to assess people.[36]
    • The requirement that low sexual desire causes distress or interpersonal difficulty has been criticized. It has been claimed that it is not clinically useful because if it is not causing any problems, the person will not seek out a clinician.[36] One could claim that this criterion (for all of the sexual dysfunctions, including HSDD) decreases the scientific validity of the diagnoses or is a cover-up for a lack of data on what constitutes normal sexual function.[37]
    • The distress requirement is also criticized because the term "distress" lacks a clear definition.[38]

    DSM-IV criteria

    Prior to the publication of the DSM-5, the DSM-IV criteria were criticized on several grounds. It was suggested that a duration criterion should be added because lack of interest in sex over the past month is significantly more common than lack of interest lasting six months.[39] Similarly, a frequency criterion (i.e., the symptoms of low desire be present in 75% or more of sexual encounters) has been suggested.[40][41]

    The current framework for HSDD is based on a linear model of human sexual response, developed by Masters and Johnson and modified by Kaplan consisting of desire, arousal, orgasm. The sexual dysfunctions in the DSM are based around problems at any one or more of these stages.[12] Many of the criticisms of the DSM-IV framework for sexual dysfunction in general, and HSDD in particular, claimed that this model ignored the differences between male and female sexuality. Several criticisms were based on inadequacy of the DSM-IV framework for dealing with female's sexual problems.

    • Increasingly, evidence shows that there are significant differences between male and female sexuality. Level of desire is highly variable from female to female and there are some females who are considered sexually functional who have no active desire for sex, but they can erotically respond well in contexts they find acceptable. This has been termed "responsive desire" as opposed to spontaneous desire.[12]
    • The focus on merely the physiological ignores the social, economic and political factors including sexual violence and lack of access to sexual medicine or education throughout the world affecting females and their sexual health.[42]
    • The focus on the physiological ignores the relationship context of sexuality despite the fact that these are often the cause of sexual problems.[42]
    • The focus on discrepancy in desire between two partners may result in the partner with the lower level of desire being labeled as "dysfunctional," but the problem really sits with difference between the two partners.[38] However, within couples the assessment of desire tends to be relative. That is, individuals make judgments by comparing their levels of desire to that of their partner.[40]
    • The sexual problems that females complain of often do not fit well into the DSM-IV framework for sexual dysfunctions.[42]
    • The DSM-IV system of sub-typing may be more applicable to one sex than the other.[8]
    • Research indicates a high degree of comorbidity between HSDD and female sexual arousal disorder. Therefore, a diagnosis combining the two (as the DSM-5 eventually did) might be more appropriate.[43]

    References

    Template:Reflist

    Further reading

    • Peter Cryle and Alison Moore, Frigidity: An Intellectual History. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011. Template:ISBN.
    • Peter Cryle and Alison Moore, Frigidity at the Fin-de-Siècle, a Slippery and Capacious Concept, Journal of the History of Sexuality 19 (2) May 2010, 243-261.
    • Alison Moore, Frigidity, Gender and Power in French Cultural History – From Jean Fauconney to Marie Bonaparte. French Cultural Studies20 (4), November 2009, 331-349.
    • Alison Moore, The Invention of the Unsexual: Situating Frigidity in the History of Sexuality and in Feminist Thought. French History and Civilization 2 (2009), 181-192.
    • Template:Cite journal
    • Template:Cite journal
    • Template:Cite journal
    • Template:Cite journal
    • Template:Cite journal
    1. 1.0 1.1 University of Maryland, Medical Centre: Inhibited sexual desire
    2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Template:Cite book
    3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Template:Cite book
    4. Template:Cite book
    5. Munjack, Dennis, and Pamela Kanno. "An overview of outcome on frigidity: treatment effects and effectiveness." Comprehensive Psychiatry 17.3 (1976): 401-413.
    6. Template:Cite book
    7. Template:Cite journal
    8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 Template:Cite book
    9. Template:Cite journal
    10. Template:Cite journal
    11. Template:Cite journal
    12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 Template:Cite book
    13. Template:Cite journal
    14. Template:Cite web
    15. Template:Cite journal
    16. Template:Cite journal
    17. 17.0 17.1 Template:Cite journal
    18. Peter Cryle and Alison Moore, Frigidity: An Intellectual History. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011. Template:ISBN.
    19. Peter Cyle and Alison Moore, Frigidity at the Fin-de-Siècle, a Slippery and Capacious Concept, Journal of the History of Sexuality 19 (2) May 2010, 243-261.
    20. Relocating Marie Bonaparte’s Clitoris. Australian Feminist Studies 24 (60), April 2009, 149-165.
    21. Template:Cite book
    22. Template:Cite book
    23. Template:Cite book
    24. Template:Cite book
    25. Template:Harvnb
    26. 26.0 26.1 Template:Cite journal
    27. Template:Cite book
    28. Template:Harvnb
    29. Template:Cite book
    30. American Psychological Association (1987)
    31. Template:Cite journal
    32. Template:Cite journal
    33. Template:Harvnb
    34. Template:Cite journal
    35. Template:Cite journal
    36. 36.0 36.1 Template:Cite journal
    37. Template:Cite journal
    38. 38.0 38.1 Template:Cite journal
    39. Template:Cite journal
    40. 40.0 40.1 Template:Cite journal
    41. Template:Cite journal
    42. 42.0 42.1 42.2 Template:Cite journal
    43. Template:Cite journal
    Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.
    Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.