Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2971651815> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2971651815 endingPage "1528" @default.
- W2971651815 startingPage "1518" @default.
- W2971651815 abstract "Abstract Introduction Although fibromyalgia symptoms negatively affect patients’ sexual life, sexual desire in women diagnosed with fibromyalgia has been understudied. Aim To describe and compare sexual desire in women diagnosed with fibromyalgia and healthy control women, and to investigate the influence of fibromyalgia and its pharmacologic treatment on sexual desire among women diagnosed with fibromyalgia. Methods 164 women diagnosed with fibromyalgia participated in the study. Participants’ sexual desire, fibromyalgia symptoms, symptom interference in daily life activities, and perceived quality of life were measured. Further sociodemographic and health-related data were also recorded. 87 healthy women were selected as a control group, and their sexual desire was compared with those of women diagnosed with fibromyalgia. Main Outcome Measures Main outcome measures included the Sexual Desire Inventory and the Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire. Results When compared with healthy control subjects, women diagnosed with fibromyalgia exhibited a significantly lower mean score on total desire (47.92 ± 17.48 vs 26.33 ± 21.95; P < .001), solitary desire (10.52 ± 5.96 vs 5.74 ± 7.01; P < .001), and dyadic desire (37.40 ± 13.98 vs 20.59 ± 16.94; P < .001). Women diagnosed with fibromyalgia who were taking antidepressants scored significantly lower on dyadic desire (P < .001), solitary desire (P < .001), and total desire (P < .001) than those who were not. Furthermore, a negative correlation between desire (dyadic and solitary) and Revised Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (total and all subscales) was found. Linear regression showed that taking antidepressants, age, and the total Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire score explained 16% of the variance of total desire. Clinical Implications Knowing how fibromyalgia symptoms and their pharmacologic treatment affect women’s sexual desire may have implications for designing care strategies according to individual needs. Strengths & Limitations To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study that focuses on studying the impact of fibromyalgia on dyadic and solitary sexual desire. Limitations are related to having used an online questionnaire for data collection, having recruited the participants through a convenience sampling technique and not being able to isolate whether certain results are related to fibromyalgia symptoms or are side effects of the pharmacologic treatment used for symptom control. Conclusion Fibromyalgia impact seems to negatively influence dyadic and solitary sexual desire in women. In addition, other factors such as age or taking antidepressant drugs may result in lower sexual desire in these patients." @default.
- W2971651815 created "2019-09-12" @default.
- W2971651815 creator A5003120768 @default.
- W2971651815 creator A5036446790 @default.
- W2971651815 creator A5037442564 @default.
- W2971651815 creator A5064673823 @default.
- W2971651815 creator A5069542989 @default.
- W2971651815 creator A5090564606 @default.
- W2971651815 date "2019-09-06" @default.
- W2971651815 modified "2023-10-12" @default.
- W2971651815 title "Dyadic and Solitary Sexual Desire in Patients With Fibromyalgia: A Controlled Study" @default.
- W2971651815 cites W132367908 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W1895030301 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W1969181077 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W1984474771 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W1985053182 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2003782017 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2005586134 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2020929325 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2022342720 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2042116454 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2045744686 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2049056319 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2069996560 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2080756517 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2093956438 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2115857909 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2116182643 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2118439987 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2136021003 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2175438593 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2287066409 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2329737710 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2517396945 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2555496527 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2580716744 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2739464008 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W2787922519 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W321176576 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W4247665917 @default.
- W2971651815 cites W4250502381 @default.
- W2971651815 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsxm.2019.07.026" @default.
- W2971651815 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31501059" @default.
- W2971651815 hasPublicationYear "2019" @default.
- W2971651815 type Work @default.
- W2971651815 sameAs 2971651815 @default.
- W2971651815 citedByCount "5" @default.
- W2971651815 countsByYear W29716518152021 @default.
- W2971651815 countsByYear W29716518152022 @default.
- W2971651815 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2971651815 hasAuthorship W2971651815A5003120768 @default.
- W2971651815 hasAuthorship W2971651815A5036446790 @default.
- W2971651815 hasAuthorship W2971651815A5037442564 @default.
- W2971651815 hasAuthorship W2971651815A5064673823 @default.
- W2971651815 hasAuthorship W2971651815A5069542989 @default.
- W2971651815 hasAuthorship W2971651815A5090564606 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConcept C107993555 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConcept C126322002 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConcept C1862650 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConcept C2776035688 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConcept C2777092991 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConcept C2777831278 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConcept C2778093883 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConcept C2779951463 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConcept C46312422 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConcept C53813258 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConcept C542102704 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConceptScore W2971651815C107993555 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConceptScore W2971651815C126322002 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConceptScore W2971651815C144024400 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConceptScore W2971651815C15744967 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConceptScore W2971651815C1862650 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConceptScore W2971651815C2776035688 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConceptScore W2971651815C2777092991 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConceptScore W2971651815C2777831278 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConceptScore W2971651815C2778093883 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConceptScore W2971651815C2779951463 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConceptScore W2971651815C46312422 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConceptScore W2971651815C53813258 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConceptScore W2971651815C542102704 @default.
- W2971651815 hasConceptScore W2971651815C71924100 @default.
- W2971651815 hasFunder F4320331435 @default.
- W2971651815 hasIssue "10" @default.
- W2971651815 hasLocation W29716518151 @default.
- W2971651815 hasLocation W29716518152 @default.
- W2971651815 hasOpenAccess W2971651815 @default.
- W2971651815 hasPrimaryLocation W29716518151 @default.
- W2971651815 hasRelatedWork W2020929325 @default.
- W2971651815 hasRelatedWork W2095939708 @default.
- W2971651815 hasRelatedWork W2118439987 @default.
- W2971651815 hasRelatedWork W2171598174 @default.
- W2971651815 hasRelatedWork W2332163402 @default.
- W2971651815 hasRelatedWork W2744261298 @default.
- W2971651815 hasRelatedWork W2899693893 @default.
- W2971651815 hasRelatedWork W2909252410 @default.