High sexual desire may be caused by disease
In real life, many women will suspect that their husbands are having an affair because they cannot get sexual satisfaction, or they will be in a trance in daily life, and they will be completely exhausted when their sexual desire occurs. If you cannot control yourself, this kind of sexual excitement occurs too frequently, too quickly, and too intensely, it may be caused by disease.
1. Menopause: In menopausal women, the ovarian estrogen secretion decreases, and the pituitary gland secretes too much gonadotropin feedback, resulting in a strange rebound phenomenon and hypersexuality. In addition, menopausal women are prone to manic symptoms, which include unfounded suspicions that their spouses are having an affair, and sometimes baseless suspicions that their husbands and third parties are plotting to harm them. This kind of mental disorder can cause a decrease in the ability to inhibit sexual excitement. Regardless of men and women, more than 60% of people have a tendency to have hypersexuality.
2. Brain lesions Brain lesions, especially those affecting the sexual center of the brain or hypothalamus, such as pituitary gland and gonad lesions, can lead to excess gonadotropin-releasing hormone and increase gonadotropins. Or due to pituitary disease, excessive secretion of gonadotropin in the anterior lobe, resulting in increased secretion of sex hormones and hypersexuality.
3. Polycystic ovary syndrome patients have strong sexual desire and obvious sexual impulse. The clinical manifestations of this disease include irregular menstruation, obesity, hairiness, acne or seborrheic dermatitis. Examination can reveal that such patients have no ovulation, which will lead to infertility; B-ultrasound can reveal multiple follicles on the patient's ovaries. The biggest harm of polycystic ovary syndrome is infertility. In addition, it also increases the risk of endometrial hyperplasia and cancer, and is also related to metabolic disorders such as diabetes, abnormal lipid metabolism, and cardiovascular disease.
4. Hypersexuality may occur in the early stages of thyroid diseases such as hyperthyroidism. Clinically, it is characterized by hyperexcitability in hypermetabolic syndrome, neurovascular system, etc. Generally, 10% to 20% of patients have symptoms of hypersexuality, especially patients with mild hyperthyroidism.
5. Schizophrenia can cause loss of sexual desire, but it may also lead to hypersexuality in the early stages, especially in patients with paranoid mental illness, due to a decrease in the ability to inhibit sexual excitement. These patients are often accompanied by obscene speech and endless entanglement with members of the opposite sex.