Sexual Health problems during Cancer in women

 


Cancer treatment can cause physical and emotional changes, including to your sex life. Doctors call these types of changes" sexual side effects." They include changes in your interest in sex and your capability to take part in sexual exertion.

Sexual side effects can be physical, internal, or emotional. Cancer treatment can affect your mood, body image, energy position, and sense of well- being. And all of these can affect your sex life.

Changes related to your sexual health from cancer or its treatment may be during or after treatment. These changes might go down or they might be permanent. Everyone is different.

Physical effects from treatment are more likely with treatments that affect your sex organs directly. For illustration, treatment for prostate cancer, bladder cancer, or testicular cancer is more likely to affect your physical capability to have sex than some other treatments for other types of cancer. Still, treatment for other cancers, similar as leukemia, can also make you have little interest in sex by making you feel tired or sick. This is why it can be helpful to talk with your health care platoon about your specific diagnosis and what to anticipate.

Sexual side effects can include:

  • Lower interest in sex.
  • Difficulty getting a construction or keeping one for enough time to have sex with penetration." Erectile dysfunction" and" ED" are other names for this problem.
  • Premature interjection, which is having an orgasm before you want to.
  • Passing some urine during an orgasm.
  • Having a" dry" orgasm with no semen coming out. This can be if semen flows backward, into the bladder, rather of out of the penis.

·     


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Women's sexual and reproductive health and Women's health issues

Stem cells and the reproductive system

When to See a Reproductive Endocrinologist?