Staying Sexual As You Get Older
Concerns about staying sexual as you get older? Read about advanced age
and sexual intimacy and how to remain sexually active in older age.
HealthyPlace.com Audio
Love and Aging
Psychiatrist Dr. Robert Butler, author of
"The
New Love and Sex after 60," talks about how existing relationships change in older
age, and how new relationships differ. We'll also be joined by relationship and
sex therapist Dr. Karen Brash to discuss the physical aspects of love and age.
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In many people's eyes, advanced age and sexual intimacy go
together like oil and water. But sexuality can be an important part of any
loving relationship, no matter how old you are. Below, experts in issues of
elderly sexuality discuss popular misconceptions, as well as why -- and how
- these misconceptions should change.
Are there benefits to being sexually active in older age,
or is sex a health hazard for older people?
PATRICIA BLOOM, MD: Absolutely not. There are a lot of
benefits to being sexually active, if one wants to be sexually active.
Sexual activity is one of those stimulating kinds of activities that may
promote brain function in elderly people. There's even some data to suggest
that men who have many orgasms may live a longer life, although I suspect
that what's really true is that men who are healthy enough to be very
sexually active don't have underlying severe diseases, and therefore do live
a longer life. I don't think that the sex causes you to live longer, but I
think it's correlated with living longer.
When we talk about sex, are we talking about more than
intercourse?
DAGMAR O'CONNOR, PhD: Hopefully we are. As they grow older,
many couples stop having sex, because they only consider sex to be
intercourse. They end up in my office saying, "Well, we can't have
intercourse any more." And I find that they both
masturbate separately and I
ask them, "Well, why don't you bring that together and start having some sex
life?" They say, "No, no, no, we can't do that. We must have intercourse."
And I say, "How many more children are you planning to have? How important
is this? It's a reproductive activity."
Touch is important, we know that we live longer when we have
touch. Little babies die when they're not touched.
PATRICIA BLOOM, MD: One of the most serious losses of aging
is the loss of physicality and physical intimacy. I think it's absolutely
true that when you talk about sex in elderly people, you shouldn't focus
just on intercourse, but on all of the other physical intimacies that people
may derive great benefit from without necessarily engaging in intercourse.
Some choose to have intercourse, but to think that that's the only aspect of
sexuality in the elderly would be leaving out a lot of rich activity that
some elderly, at least, find a great deal of pleasure in.
How can we, as a society, embrace sex in the elderly, and
get rid of the taboo about Grandma and Grandpa having sex?
PATRICIA BLOOM, MD: When I mention sex in the elderly, my
teenage son goes "Ewww!" There's still this thought that it's not something
that's okay for elderly people to do. People get nervous thinking about it.
Does it become increasingly difficult to achieve a good
erection for older men?
DAVID KAUFMAN, MD: There is some recent evidence that we
have in our urologic literature that the more you use your erection, the
better it will become. That has a lot to do with the oxygenation of the
smooth muscle that is really the basis of an erection. The benefit is, the
more sex you have, and the better blood flow that results from this sex, the
better quality your erection's going to be.
That's why we've actually been using drugs like
Viagra as
treatment for improving spontaneous erections. There are doctors who
prescribe Viagra to be taken on a nightly basis without sex being involved
in that night's activity, just to improve the blood flow to the penis during
the night, improve oxygenation and, as a result, we have found that people's
spontaneous erections are improved.
For men and women whose
sexual lives are suddenly
revitalized, by Viagra for instance, is there any associated risk of heart
disease and lung disease?
DAVID KAUFMAN, MD: Viagra has certainly gotten a bad rap by
the lay press. I think the point that needs to be made is that people are
not dying from Viagra. They're having myocardial events because they're
suddenly engaging in strenuous activities that they weren't engaging in
because they were impotent.
If that same individual went outside and shoveled snow, he'd
have the same heart attack he's having as a result of Viagra. So members of
the medical community need to be careful, and make sure that they're
prescribing Viagra to people who are physically fit enough to participate in
sexual relations.
There are also some
pharmaceutical contraindications to
Viagra. Nitroglycerine compounds found in cardiac medications are absolutely
and definitively contraindicated in somebody who's taking Viagra. So we
should not prescribe Viagra to anybody who either is taking, or might need
to take, a nitroglycerine compound.
What about for older women who haven't had sexual
intercourse in quite awhile? Is it okay to resume sexual activity?
Yes, you can resume sexual activity, but it may take a little time and patience.
As women age, they experience several changes in their
vaginal area. The vagina and vaginal opening often become smaller,
especially when estrogen levels are low. It often takes longer for the
vagina to swell and lubricate when you're sexually aroused. Together these
can make intercourse painful. But there are steps you can take to alleviate
the effects of these changes.
Longer foreplay helps stimulate natural lubrication. Often,
the use of lubrication can be helpful. Several products such as K-Y jelly
and Glide are available for this purpose. For some women, vaginal treatment
with estrogen is the best way to increase natural lubrication.
If a woman hasn't had intercourse for a while, it will take
time to stretch out the vagina so that it can accommodate a penis. Talk to
your partner about what works best. Keep in mind, sex is more than
intercourse. Touching and cuddling are an important part of sexual activity.
Communication between partners is the best way to achieve sexual
satisfaction.
How should a
doctor address the sexual issues with older
patients?
PATRICIA BLOOM, MD: It's very important that the doctor ask
each and every patient if they're sexually active. If so, are there any
problems? If they're not sexually active, is that a problem for them?
If we discover that a person is having a problem, then
sometimes a door will open to a medical diagnosis of conditions that need to
be treated in order to allow that person to be more sexually active. Sexual
function is highly related to other medical conditions, and needs to always
be considered when you're treating other medical conditions.
What does the future look like for pharmaceuticals that
offer people sexual help and hope?
DAVID KAUFMAN, MD: There is a whole sexual pipeline of
pharmaceuticals that will be coming out.
Viagra was really just the first of
the lot. Within the next year, we're going to see
at least two more coming
out, dealing specifically with this issue.
Next: Sex When You're Elderly
Last updated: 6/01. Last reviewed 10/05.
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