Answer:
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Step-by-step explanation:
CAUSES:
Anorgasmia can be caused by psychologic problems. Anorgasmia may also be caused by medical problems such as diabetic neuropathy, multiple sclerosis, or complications from spinal cord injury, genital surgery, radical prostatectomy, pelvic trauma, hormonal issues such as low testosterone and low thyroid. A common cause of anorgasmia, in men, is the use of anti-depressants, particularly selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). It is estimated that one quarter of users of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors are affected by anorgasmia. Very often anorgasmia is secondary to both psychologic and physiologic causes.
DIAGNOSTIC TESTS:
Some men with primary anorgasmia have no personal distress. These men may view sexual activity as pleasant despite their inability to orgasm because they achieve reward from touching, holding, kissing, caressing, and getting and giving attention.
Some men with primary anorgasmia have great personal distress. These men cannot achieve orgasmic release of sexual tension tension and may even experience pelvic pain because of genital vascular engorgement. When a man has sexual activity that is not accompanied by orgasmic release, sexual activity may become a chore or a duty rather than a mutually satisfying, intimate experience. In such circumstances, sexual desire often declines, and sexual activity can result in resentment and relationship conflict. Men with anorgasmia and personal distress should consider undergoing a combined psychologic and physiologic sexual medicine evaluation.
Some men who once had the ability to have orgasm develop secondary anorgasmia from psychologic issues such as drug addiction or alcoholism, depression, grief or loss. Some men develop secondary anorgasmia from physiologic issues such as diminished genital sensation, pelvic surgery or injuries, sexual pain, erectile dysfunction, reduced sexual arousal, hypoactive sexual desire disorder, medications especially SSRI’s and 5 alpha reductase inhibitors, chronic illnesses, or low testosterone and/or low thyroid hormonal states. Whether a man has psychologic-based or physiologic-based anorgasmia, if he has associated personal distress, a combined psychologic and physiologic sexual medicine evaluation should be considered.
Men may develop a situational form of secondary anorgasmia in which the man is more easily orgasmic in some situations (certain partner and certain type of foreplay) and cannot achieve orgasm in other situations. These variations are not usually associated with great personal distress. Should situational secondary anorgasmia cause personal distress, a combined psychologic and physiologic sexual medicine evaluation should be considered.