Abstract
Background: Many patients and health literature, in general, allege that psychotropic agents cause sexual side effects. Objective: We intended to investigate this issue in a Nepalese clinical setting by estimating the prevalence of psychosexual problems among remitted psychiatric outpatients (on psychotropic medication) and by comparing it with that of a nonpsychiatric patient group (on nonpsychotropic medication). Methodology: In this hospital-based cross-sectional comparison study with purposive sampling, we collected the responses to a self-response questionnaire called “Arizona Sexual Experience Scale” from a total of 400 subjects: 100 male and 100 female consecutive consenting remitted psychiatric and dermatological outpatients, each with sex and marital status matching. We recorded pertinent information in the proforma and screened psychosexual problems with the Arizona Sexual Experience Scale after informed written consent. The problems in psychiatric and dermatological groups were compared. Results: We have more subjects of reproductive ages in both the psychiatric and dermatological groups. Depression, anxiety, and bipolar affective disorder were the most common diagnoses in the psychiatric patients, whereas eczema, fungal, immunologic, and allergic skin lesions/diseases were common in the dermatological patients. Both groups had comparable sexual dysfunction rates, both by overall and the criteria of ≥3 items with scores ≥4, whereas dermatological patients had more problems with criteria of ≥1 item with a score ≥5. Conclusions: Psychosexual dysfunction was more or less similar in frequency among both the psychiatric patients on psychotropic medication and dermatological patients on topical agents.
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