Pfizer has no current plans to develop medicines for female sexual arousal disorder.
A team of researchers based at Pfizer's labs in Sandwich, Kent, United Kingdom has found that electrically stimulating the pelvic nerve increases blood flow to the genitalia, and that this effect was enhanced if they also gave an experimental drug known as UK-414,495. The researchers believe that the drug acts by blocking the breakdown of an internal chemical messenger that plays a key role in increasing blood flow during sexual arousal. Their findings are published in the British Journal of Pharmacology.
Female sexual arousal disorder affects up to 40 percent of women irrespective of age. These women find that their genital organs do not respond to sexual stimulation, they find arousal difficult and this causes them to become distressed. When women become aroused, blood flow increases to the vagina, labia and clitoris. This causes the organs to swell, and the vagina to relax, as well as increasing vaginal lubrication and the sensitivity of the genitalia.
“Before this work, we knew surprisingly little about the processes that control all of these changes,” says the lead researcher in the project Chris Wayman. He says now that scientists are beginning to establish the pathways involved in sexual arousal they may be able to find ways of helping women who would like to overcome female sexual arousal disorder.
This is early stage research involved experimental studies using an animal model of sexual arousal. In it researchers stimulated the pelvic nerve and measured changes in genital organs. They believed the genital arousal occurred because stimulation of the nerve triggered the release of vasoactive intestinal peptide, a well-known neurotransmitter. Vasoactive intestinal peptide has only a short-lived effect, because it is soon broken down by an enzyme called Neutral Endopeptidase.
The researchers believe that their prototype drug increased arousal because it blocked Neutral Endopeptidase's ability to break down vasoactive intestinal peptide, therefore letting the vasoactive intestinal peptide have a more powerful and prolonged effect increasing arousal.
While the drug did increase the level of sexual arousal, it didn't affect arousal in the absence of stimulation or the rest of the body's cardiovascular system. This suggests that this sort of drug would have a good chance of being safe to use in women, and would only work when combined with sexual stimulation, the researchers say.
While the drug did increase the level of sexual arousal, it didn't affect arousal in the absence of stimulation or the rest of the body's cardiovascular system. This suggests that this sort of drug would have a good chance of being safe to use in women, and would only work when combined with sexual stimulation, the researchers say.
While the particular chemical compound studied in this research did not prove appropriate for further development, the researchers say the implications of the research could lead to the development of a product in future. Wyman, however, says Pfizer has no current plans to develop medicines for female sexual arousal disorder.