HomeAnswersPsychiatryssriHow can post-SSRI sexual dysfunction (PSSD) be cured?

I am suffering from post-SSRI sexual dysfunction. Please help.

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Published At May 2, 2017
Reviewed AtAugust 21, 2023

Patient's Query

Hello doctor,

I am a 23 year old male, and I took Lexapro for two months when I was 20 years old. And then quit abruptly, because every time I would sleep for a very long time without dreaming, and also wake up feeling bad. It has been three years now, and my sexual functioning and libido have gone down, it is called post-SSRI sexual dysfunction (PSSD). I was the horniest, sexually explorative, and a creative guy. It is like I am an entirely different person now. My ambitions, sexuality, zest, desires, and emotions, everything has gone. The lack of all this does not even trouble me, which is the strangest thing. I am intellectually troubled by this but cannot feel it, and I feel like a potato. I had tried one dose of Selegiline before, which kind of felt good, but I dropped it due to long-term safety concerns and the possibility of interactions with high tyramine foods. After researching on the internet, and keeping in mind dependence risks, and effects on receptors, I was thinking of trying Rasagiline. I would be very grateful if you could guide me and suggest some possible cure.

Hello,

Welcome to icliniq.com.

I can understand your concern regarding your symptoms and side effects of the medications. The symptoms you mentioned above are showing that you are suffering from dysthymia and moderate depression.Depression itself is a cause of poor sexual drive. Lexapro that is Escitalopram may cause loss of libido and sexual dysfunction, as you have already stopped this medicine long ago, depression is the primary cause of your symptoms. I will suggest you try taking newer invented molecules like Vilazodone. This drug has no daytime somnolence and sexual dysfunction. It will help you in early recovery. Take it for at least three months, and then stop slowly by tapering. Consult your specialist doctor, discuss with him or her and start taking medicine after their consent. Within a couple of weeks, you will feel better, and these drugs have fewer chances of withdrawal depression when they are stopped and tapered slowly. Behavioral therapies like CBT (cognitive behavioral therapy) or DBT (dialectical behavioral therapy) and counseling will help you to cope up your stress and will help you to maintain a happy state of mind. Visit a nearby psychiatrist for a proper prescription and counseling. Your symptoms are curable, 20 % of the population spend some part of their life in depression, and half of them overcome with this illness. Hope my answer helped you. Thank you.

Patient's Query

Hi doctor,

Thank you for your answer. However, in my assessment and internet research after three years, I am convinced that mine is an iatrogenic condition caused by the SSRI. Though it may seem implausible, the side effects of it have persisted long after quitting the medication. Not just for me, but for thousands of people worldwide. And as for my symptoms, I do not have somnolence or anxiety. I am not at all sad, and I sleep well and have dreams. I am just emotionless and indifferent. It is a very different feeling from what I felt when I had slight anxiety, for which the SSRI was prescribed. But I do not deny that you could not be right. But after speaking with quite a few psychiatrists, I know that everything else would be blamed except for the obvious culprit. I sincerely need help doctor.

Hi,

Welcome back to icliniq.com.

No such evidence say SSRI (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor) would affect people after such a long time. Patients have taken this medication for long durations, along with some other medicines. Single doses will unlikely cause such symptoms after stopping the same drug. As Escitalopram caused drowsiness to you, I suggested better drug which is not having such side effects. Anxiety and depression both are because of low levels of serotonin in brain and disturbances in norepinephrine levels. SSRI drugs are effective equally in both the cases. Kindly follow my advice, I am sure you will recover from emotional blunting and other symptoms. Thank you.

Same symptoms don't mean you have the same problem. Consult a doctor now!

Dr. Awadhesh P. Singh Solanki
Dr. Awadhesh P. Singh Solanki

Psychiatry

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