Scientific Reports (May 2024)

Women and men with distressing low sexual desire exhibit sexually dimorphic brain processing

  • Natalie Ertl,
  • Edouard G. Mills,
  • Matthew B. Wall,
  • Layla Thurston,
  • Lisa Yang,
  • Sofiya Suladze,
  • Tia Hunjan,
  • Maria Phylactou,
  • Bijal Patel,
  • Paul A. Bassett,
  • Jonathan Howard,
  • Eugenii A. Rabiner,
  • Ali Abbara,
  • David Goldmeier,
  • Alexander N. Comninos,
  • Waljit S. Dhillo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-61190-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Distressing low sexual desire, termed Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder (HSDD), affects approximately 10% of women and 8% of men. In women, the ‘top-down’ theory of HSDD describes hyperactivity in higher-level cognitive brain regions, suppressing lower-level emotional/sexual brain areas. However, it is unknown how this neurofunctional disturbance compares to HSDD in men. To investigate this, we employed task-based functional MRI in 32 women and 32 men with HSDD to measure sexual-brain processing during sexual versus non-sexual videos, as well as psychometric questionnaires to assess sexual desire/arousal. We demonstrate that women had greater activation in higher-level and lower-level brain regions, compared to men. Indeed, women who had greater hypothalamic activation in response to sexual videos, reported higher psychometric scores in the evaluative (r = 0.55, P = 0.001), motivational (r = 0.56, P = 0.003), and physiological (r = 0.57, P = 0.0006) domains of sexual desire and arousal after watching the sexual videos in the scanner. By contrast, no similar correlations were observed in men. Taken together, this is the first direct comparison of the neural correlates of distressing low sexual desire between women and men. The data supports the ‘top-down’ theory of HSDD in women, whereas in men HSDD appears to be associated with different neurofunctional processes.