Archive for December, 2006

BLOOD TEST WILL ACCURATELY DIAGNOSE ANXIETY

A new technique that can accurately diagnose anxiety disorders by performing a simple blood test, was developed at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. The researchers hope that the anxiety blood test will soon make its way into hospitals and E.R. rooms and give doctors and psychiatrists a quick and precise tool for examining, and eventually treating, these disorders. The team has recently started work on another common illness – depression. They hope to find a way to diagnose and finally treat the millions who suffer from this illness as well.

The Effects of Anxiety on Lack of Climax Control

Anxiety can often be an important factor or contributor to lack of ejaculatory control in men and these effects are well-documented in the medical literature. There are over 100 supporting articles, referenced by The National Library Of Medicine (PubMED), published in the medical literature, that demonstrate anxiety and early ejaculation are causally-linked. Deferol™ has been scientifically formulated to effectively address the unwanted performance anxiety often associated with sex.

The Effects of Serotonin on Climax Control

There is definitive medical and scientific evidence that increasing serotonin levels relative to other neurotransmitters improves ejaculatory control in men. There are over [172] supporting articles referenced by The National Library Of Medicine (PubMED), published in the medical literature that demonstrate that increasing serotonin centrally or the use of certain prescription antidepressants of the serotonin-selective type (SSRI’s) are useful in delaying early or premature ejaculation and improve climax control.

When Sex Goes Wrong

At the same symposium, Dr Clayton mentioned that serotonin can dampen sexual desire and excitement. It can also deaden sensation, leading to vasocongestion (”blue balls”). Prolactin can have a negative impact on sexual excitement.
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Love at Risk

At a different APA forum, “Sex, Sexuality, and Serotonin,” Dr Fisher warned that antidepressants may jeopardize romantic love. As well as high dopamine and norepinephrine, she said, romantic love is characterized by low serotonin. Low serotonin would explain the obsessive thinking attached to romantic love. In her MRI study, her subjects reported that they thought about their loved one 95 percent of the day and couldn’t stop thinking about them. This kind of obsessive thinking is comparable to OCD, she said, also characterized by low serotonin.
Continue reading ‘Love at Risk’




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