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Do surgical interventions influence psychosexual and cosmetic outcomes in women with disorders of sex development?

Abstract
Clinical practice developed to promote psychosexual well-being in DSD is under scrutiny. Although techniques for genital surgery have much improved lately, long-term studies on psychosexual functioning and cosmetic outcome on which to base treatment and counseling are scarce. We studied 91 women with a DSD. Feminizing surgery was performed in 64% of the women; in 60% of them, resurgery in puberty was needed after a single-stage procedure. Both patients and gynecologists were satisfied with the cosmetic appearance of the genitalia. However, forty percent of these females experienced sexuality-related distress and 66% was at risk for developing a sexual dysfunction, whether they had surgery or not. Recognizing the difficulty of accurate assessment, our data indicate that feminizing surgery does not seem to improve nor hamper psychosexual outcome, especially in patients with severe virilization.
AuthorsNina Callens, Yvonne G van der Zwan, Stenvert L S Drop, Martine Cools, Catharina M Beerendonk, Katja P Wolffenbuttel, Arianne B Dessens
JournalISRN endocrinology (ISRN Endocrinol) Vol. 2012 Pg. 276742 ( 2012) ISSN: 2090-4649 [Electronic] United States
PMID22462013 (Publication Type: Journal Article)

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