Saturday, November 11, 2023

physiology of human sexual function

The terminology for the complexities of human sexual activity is discussed and the male and female sexual arousal to orgasm is described with its underlying physiological mechanisms. The original four-phased human sexual response cycle of Masters & Johnson (Excitation, Plateau, Orgasm, Resolution) is now modified by amalgamation of the plateau phase into the excitation phase and the addition of two desire phases, one spontaneous (proactive) the other activated by arousal per se (reactive). The relation between genital arousal and subjective arousal is reviewed for males and females. In males, erection and subjective arousal usually have good concordance but in females increased vaginal blood flow and lubrication can occur without any concomitant subjective arousal even with sexually aversive stimuli. The subjective feeling of sexual arousal in women is now regarded as more complex than stimuli from the genitals, involving the contextual meaning and content of the stimuli. Imaging studies have revealed multiple areas of the brain that become involved during sexual arousal and at orgasm. However, different studies using different techniques and analyses have given conflicting accounts of which areas are activated and which are deactivated, and it is not possible at present to finalize the position.


Section snippets

The terminology of human sexual activity

Many authors use the terms ‘sexual arousal’ and ‘sexual excitement’ synonymously but it is useful to keep sexual arousal (a state) to denote physiological changes and sexual excitement as the subjective awareness of the arousal. Greater difficulty occurs when it comes to describing the central mental process creating the subjective awareness of arousal. The literature has sexual drive, desire, interest, appetite, motivation and libido (see Levin2 for a detailed discussion). Sexual drive is the


Sexual response cycle

The sequence of events that characterizes the progression from the sexually unaroused to the aroused state and the resolution of these changes is described as the human sexual response cycle,5 with genital and non-genital components. The latter include increased heart rate, blood pressure and respiration, nipple erection, myotonia and dilated pupils.


Watch YouTube here 

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=CI5urExTSCw


The biological purpose of the sexual response in men is to enable sperm to be introduced into the vagina, while the genital changes occurring in


Spinal cord mechanisms

Sensory input arising from stimulation of the external genitalia is conveyed in the pudendal nerve to the medial central grey matter of the lumbosacral spine and the information is relayed to supraspinal sites in the spinothalamic and spinoreticular pathways. Two different pathways carry the sensory information from the glans via the dorsal nerve of the penis. The sensory fibres of the pudendal nerve conveys the information to the spinal cord, and the information also travels to the hypogastric 


Brain imaging during sexual arousal and orgasm

Apart from the very limited information available from subjects with brain lesions, those with epilepsy and the rare cases of electrical stimulation of the brain (see Levin2 for references), animal studies, especially in rodents, have been the major source of information about the central mechanisms controlling sexual arousal/behaviour. While numerous neurotransmitters are implicated in the complex mechanisms of sexual activity (cholinergic, adrenergic, vipergic, oxyntergic, prolactinergic),


Genital arousal

Genital arousal in both sexes is essentially a vasocongestive and neuromuscular event controlled by facilitatory parasympathetic and inhibiting sympathetic neural mechanisms. The primary changes are penile erection in men and clitoral tumescence, genital vasocongestion and increased vaginal lubrication in women. The increase in heart rate and blood pressure that occurs during sexual arousal provides the increased blood flow to the genitals.


Ejaculation and orgasm

Ejaculation in the male is the process by which spermatozoa contained within seminal fluid are ejected forcefully from the urethral meatus. Some women experience a discharge of fluid from the urethra at orgasm and high levels of sexual arousal, often by stimulation of the so-called G-spot on the anterior wall of the vagina, and this has been termed ‘female ejaculation’. Whether this discharge is urine or a product of the paraurethral glands or a mixture of both continues to be debated.18


Hormones and human sexuality

An account of the role of hormones in human sexuality is too complex to be dealt with in this contribution but their importance should not be overlooked. Briefly, the sex steroids, especially androgens and oestrogens, have essential developmental (organisational), maintenance and activational functions in both males and females. Oestrogens are more involved in female sexuality, especially the development and maintenance of genitalia and breasts. Androgens, however, are important in both male


Conclusion

Sexual functioning involves an integrated series of physiological processes with complicated peripheral and central control systems. Our understanding of the physiology of the peripheral events in the male is advanced and we are now beginning to elucidate those of the female. Much of our knowledge of central mechanisms is derived from animal studies, and with current advances in imaging technology it is becoming possible to assess the relevance of findings in animals to the human state. A


References (20)

J. Redouté et al.

Brain processing of visual sex stimuli in treated and untreated hypogonadal subjects

Psychoneuroendocrinology

(2005)

A. Riley et al.

Relevant issues in the diagnosis and management of psychosexual disorders

Primary Care Psychiatry

(1999)

R.J. Levin

Human male sexuality: appetite and arousal, desire and drive

A. Riley

Problems of the sexual response cycle

Journal of the Diplomates of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists

(1997)

R. Basson

Biopsychosocial models of women’s sexual response: applications to management of desire disorders

Sex Relationship Ther

(2003)

W. Masters et al.

Human sexual response

(1966)

R.J. Levin

Sexual arousal – its physiological roles in human reproduction

Annu Rev Sex Res

(2005)

R.J. Levin

Sexual desire and the deconstruction and reconstruction of the human sexual response model of Masters and Johnson

G. Holstege

Central nervous system control of ejaculation

World J Urol

(2005)

R.G. Parades et al.

Has dopamine a physiological role in the central control of sexual behaviour? A critical review of the evidence

Prog Neurobiol

(2004)

There are more references available in the full text version of this article.

Cited by (21)

Is Mode of Delivery Associated With Sexual Response? A Pilot Study of Genital and Subjective Sexual Arousal in Primiparous Women With Vaginal or Cesarean Section Births

2020, Journal of Sexual Medicine

Show abstract

A review of infrared thermography as applied to human sexual psychophysiology

2018, International Journal of Psychophysiology

Citation Excerpt :

Sexual arousal is a multi-dimensional state that encompasses physiological changes dependent on activation of the central nervous system, the perception of these changes, subjective experience of arousal, and motivated behavior (Geer et al., 1993; Rosen and Beck, 1988). Physiological responses specific to sexual arousal include genital responses (erection in men and vaginal lubrication, clitoral, and vulvar congestion in women), with the congestion leading to an increase in pelvic vascular blood flow and resultant pelvic vasocongestion (Levin, 1998, 2003; Levin and Riley, 2007). Genital vasocongestion is also associated with increases in genital skin temperature (Henson et al., 1977; Webster and Hammer, 1983).


Show abstract

Examining the time course of genital and subjective sexual responses in women and men with concurrent plethysmography and thermography

2017, Biological Psychology

Citation Excerpt :

To address these gaps, we concurrently assessed changes in vaginal vasoengorgement, penile circumference, genital temperature, and emotional arousal, and examined the time course and relationships between these different aspects of sexual response using statistical methods that could examine their dynamic nature. Heart rate and blood pressure increase with sexual arousal and lead to genital vasocongestion − increased blood flow to the genitals (Levin & Riley, 2007). This blood flow is the result of relaxation of the cavernous muscle of the penis and dilation of the cavernosal artery, or dilation of the capillaries of the vagina (Levin & Riley, 2007).


Show abstract

Sexual Activity and Heart Patients: A Contemporary Perspective

2016, Canadian Journal of Cardiology

Citation Excerpt :

Data regarding sexuality suggests that men and women exhibit differences in sexual functioning; furthermore, evidence has also fostered an increasing recognition of the importance of an integrative approach, rather than a strictly physiological approach, to understand sexual behavior.38 This contemporary perspective provides a theoretical framework for the current understanding, diagnosis, and treatment of sexual dysfunction.38,39 During SA, energy expenditure and oxygen requirements increase, with maximal levels reached during orgasm.


Show abstract

Sexual response models in women

2009, Maturitas

Show abstract

Is male orgasm complex? Exploratory study of discourse about the orgasm of 923 men in heterosexual couple

2019, Sexologies

Show abstract

No comments:

Post a Comment