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Index/Topics/Antiserotonergic Medicines

Antiserotonergic Medicines

The use of antiserotonergic medicines, such as cyproheptadine, to counteract SSRI-induced sexual side effects.

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3 results
Feb 6, 2026

What is an expected range for testosterone with 0.3 ML‘s given twice a week with concentration of 200 mg per ML of testosterone unit. With starting testosterone level being 200.

A twice‑weekly regimen of 0.3 mL per injection of a 200 mg/mL testosterone preparation delivers 60 mg per shot (120 mg/week) and — based on published pharmacokinetics and clinical dosing data — would ...

Jan 9, 2026

What are the comparative rates of sexual dysfunction between individual SSRIs, SNRIs, bupropion and mirtazapine in randomized trials?

Randomized trials and pooled analyses consistently show that serotonergic antidepressants — SSRIs and SNRIs — carry substantially higher rates of treatment-emergent sexual dysfunction than non‑seroton...

Jan 5, 2026

Which medications can enable orgasm without ejaculation and how do they work?

Several medications can alter the usual coupling of orgasm and ejaculation—either by delaying or preventing semen emission while allowing the perceptual orgasm to occur, or by restoring orgasm when ej...

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