Young woman can’t stop orgasm – doctor is sad
Come again?
Chinese doctors say they are confused by the case of a young woman experiencing uncontrollable organisms every day, putting the 20-year-old child in an eternal state of awakening.
“Sexual arousal symptoms are characterized by recurrent and spontaneous orgasm experiences,” wrote Jing Yan and Dafang Ouyang of Beijing Sixth Hospital in Beijing, in the curious case published in the AME case report.
For five years, the unnamed young man experienced this thunder because there was no sexual stimulation that led experts to infer her ongoing genital arousal disease (PGAD).
According to the study, this pain may sound like hours of fun, but constant pleasure can bring great pain, resulting in “a significant damage to psychosocial well-being and daily operations.”
This is certainly the case for patients, reportedly, and they have experienced great troubles to go to school or work or maintain relationships.
Unfortunately, it is a long time to be diagnosed with PGAD.
Her symptoms first raised her head at the age of 14, initially manifested as an “electric” sensation in her abdomen and a pelvic contraction with orgasm.
Somewhat confused, around the same time, young people also began to show higher sensitivity—plus strange beliefs like thinking someone could read her thoughts, which led to her being hospitalized a year later and treating depression and psychiatric symptoms.
Despite multiple therapies, including anti-epileptics and psychotropic drugs, the patient’s symptoms remained, leading her to believe that her orgasm was caused by external stimuli.
When she finally reported to the hospital, her condition had snowballed so much that she could hardly explain her symptoms without being interrupted by an orgasm.
The neurologist initially ruled out epilepsy through EEG monitoring and other tests, and there was no structural abnormality in the brain or reproductive organs that were examined, which could trigger her perennial pleasant reaction.
After the antipsychotic regimen seemed to relieve her important moments and delusions, the doctor eventually diagnosed a patient with PGAD.
After several weeks of treatment, the patient’s condition improved to the point where she could go back to work and live a social life.
But whenever she stops treatment, her symptoms will revenge.
Unfortunately, the PGAD is still flying under the radar. According to the Cleveland Clinic, the disease was first formally described in 2001, and the disease is expected to affect 1% of women in the United States, but is still undiagnosed.
Possible causes include all factors of nerves, blood flow, antidepressants (such as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors).
Some people even associate abnormal diseases with imbalances in dopamine, a neurotransmitter involved in brain arousal and reward systems.
Dosing a patient with the above-mentioned antipsychotic medication may inhibit this dopamine response, thereby alleviating her arousal symptoms.
Unfortunately, so far, there is no certain treatment for PGAD.

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