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Female Sexual Arousal Disorder

Female Sexual Arousal Disorder Treatment for Improved Intimacy

When your body does not respond to touch or desire the way it used to, female sexual arousal disorder can quietly affect more than intimacy. It can change how you feel about your partner, your confidence, and even your sense of self as a woman. At Optimal Longevity MD, care for female sexual dysfunction begins with listening. Dr. Lucy Guevara takes time to understand when things started to shift, what you notice in your body, which life changes may be involved, and what feeling “better” would look like for you. From there, she designs a plan that can include hormone support, regenerative options, and lifestyle changes you can actually use in daily life.

What Is Female Sexual Arousal Disorder?

Female sexual arousal disorder describes ongoing difficulty becoming or staying physically aroused, even when you feel emotionally close to your partner or want to enjoy intimacy. It often shows up as trouble with lubrication, changes in sensitivity, or noticing that your body is slower to respond during sexual activity. This concern can overlap with other forms of female sexual dysfunction, such as low desire, pain with intercourse, or trouble reaching orgasm. For many women, symptoms appear gradually with hormone shifts, stress, or health changes, rather than after one clear event. Feeling this way is more common than most women realize, and it usually means hormones, blood flow, nervous system signaling, and emotional factors all need a closer, more complete look. Read the Wikipedia article about female sexual disorder treatment.
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causes

Common Causes of Female Sexual Arousal Disorder

Understanding why arousal has changed is the first step toward gentle, effective support. For most women, it is not just one cause but several pieces that add up over time, from hormones and circulation to stress and medical history.
Looking at these influences together makes it easier to choose care that actually fits your life.

Menopause, Perimenopause, and Hormone Shifts

Shifts in testosterone, thyroid hormones, cortisol, or other messengers can lower libido, reduce morning erections, and affect how the body responds to arousal. These changes often show up along with fatigue, mood changes, or weight gain.

Postpartum, Breastfeeding, and Life Transitions

After childbirth or during breastfeeding, hormone levels shift significantly. Sleep loss, body image changes, and new responsibilities can make arousal feel distant, even if you care deeply for your partner.

Medications and Medical Conditions

Antidepressants, blood pressure medications, birth control, and cancer therapies can affect genital blood flow, nerve sensitivity, or mood. Diabetes, cardiovascular issues, and chronic pain conditions may also reduce arousal.

Stress, Mood, and Relationship Strain

Long-term stress, anxiety, trauma history, or conflict in the relationship can make it hard for the body to relax into arousal. Even subtle worries about performance or discomfort can keep the nervous system on alert.

Circulation, Pelvic Health, and Tissue Changes

Pelvic floor tension, reduced circulation, or tissue changes after surgery or injury can interfere with how arousal feels in your body. Sometimes these physical pieces are missed in quick visits or basic exams.
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symptoms

What Symptoms Does Female Sexual Arousal Disorder Cause?

Symptoms can be mild at first, then gradually affect more parts of life. An evaluation is worth considering if you notice:
Trouble becoming physically aroused even when you want to be intimate.
Reduced or absent natural lubrication during sexual activity.
Decreased sensitivity or “numbness” in the vulva or vaginal area.
A feeling that your body is not responding in sync with your mind.
Difficulty maintaining arousal long enough to enjoy intimacy.
Worry, frustration, or sadness related to sexual experiences.
Overlap with low desire, painful intercourse, or difficulty reaching orgasm.
treatments

Female Sexual Arousal Disorder Treatment Near Me in Severna Park, MD

Searching for “female sexual arousal disorder treatment near me” can feel vulnerable. At Optimal Longevity MD, care is meant to be respectful and centered on what you are actually experiencing. Dr. Guevara looks at hormones, circulation, pelvic health, stress, and relationship dynamics. Your plan may include regenerative options like platelet-rich plasma, hormone balancing, and menopause or perimenopause support.
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Pariapus Shot Icon
For women who want to focus on sensitivity and blood flow, the O‒Shot uses your own platelet‒rich plasma to support healthier genital tissue and nerve signaling. This office‒based option is placed carefully around key areas so that, over time, arousal and comfort have a better chance to improve.
Stem Cell Therapy Icon
When hormonal shifts are a major piece of female sexual dysfunction, BHRT therapy can help rebalance estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, thyroid function, and related markers. With more stable hormone levels, many women notice changes in lubrication, desire, mood, and sleep that support more satisfying intimacy.
BHRT Therapy Icon
When arousal changes are tied to low desire, energy, or mood, peptide therapy can be a focused way to support sexual wellness. Certain peptides influence brain pathways related to desire, support healthy blood flow, and help regulate stress and sleep, all of which shape intimacy.
Peptide Therapy Icon
When arousal concerns come with mood changes, brain fog, hot flashes, or trouble sleeping, the Hormonal Harmony Program looks at the bigger pattern behind your symptoms. This plan is designed for women with classic signs of hormonal imbalance, including anxiety, fatigue, low libido, menstrual changes, mood swings, and night sweats.
For women who like to understand the broader medical context, a review in The Obstetrician & Gynaecologist describes how female sexual dysfunction involves a mix of hormonal, physical, and psychological factors and emphasizes the value of individualized care.
FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions

What causes female sexual arousal disorder?
Female sexual arousal disorder can be caused by hormonal changes, reduced blood flow, nerve sensitivity issues, medications, chronic health conditions, or ongoing stress and relationship strain. Often, several of these factors are present at the same time.
How is female sexual arousal disorder diagnosed?
Female sexual arousal disorder is diagnosed through a careful conversation about your symptoms, medical and sexual history, medications, and relationship context, along with a focused physical and pelvic exam when appropriate. Additional lab testing may be used to check hormone levels, thyroid function, and metabolic health. The goal is to understand how mind, body, and hormones interact, not to reduce your experience to a single number.
What is the best treatment for female sexual arousal disorder?
The best treatment for female sexual arousal disorder depends on what is causing the problem in your specific case. Some women respond well to hormone balancing and menopause treatment, while others benefit from regenerative options like the O-Shot, pelvic floor support, or changes in medication and lifestyle. At Optimal Longevity MD, your plan is personalized rather than based on a standard protocol.
Can hormone therapy help with female sexual arousal disorder?
Hormone therapy can help with female sexual arousal disorder when low or imbalanced hormones are part of the picture. Restoring healthier levels of estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, and thyroid hormones can improve lubrication, sensitivity, mood, and sleep, all of which affect intimacy.
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Reach out to us
This form should only be used for general information (ie don't send any detailed/personal health information via this form). All patient‒specific care questions should be addressed during your appointment.