Department of Psychology, Rutgers University-Newark, Newark, NJ, USA.
Department of Psychology, Rutgers University-Newark, Newark, NJ, USA.
J Sex Med. 2017 Nov;14(11):1380-1391. doi: 10.1016/j.jsxm.2017.08.014. Epub 2017 Oct 3.
Although the literature on imaging of regional brain activity during sexual arousal in women and men is extensive and largely consistent, that on orgasm is relatively limited and variable, owing in part to the methodologic challenges posed by variability in latency to orgasm in participants and head movement.
To compare brain activity at orgasm (self- and partner-induced) with that at the onset of genital stimulation, immediately before the onset of orgasm, and immediately after the cessation of orgasm and to upgrade the methodology for obtaining and analyzing functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) findings.
Using fMRI, we sampled equivalent time points across female participants' variable durations of stimulation and orgasm in response to self- and partner-induced clitoral stimulation. The first 20-second epoch of orgasm was contrasted with the 20-second epochs at the beginning of stimulation and immediately before and after orgasm. Separate analyses were conducted for whole-brain and brainstem regions of interest. For a finer-grained analysis of the peri-orgasm phase, we conducted a time-course analysis on regions of interest. Head movement was minimized to a mean less than 1.3 mm using a custom-fitted thermoplastic whole-head and neck brace stabilizer.
Ten women experienced orgasm elicited by self- and partner-induced genital stimulation in a Siemens 3-T Trio fMRI scanner.
Brain activity gradually increased leading up to orgasm, peaked at orgasm, and then decreased. We found no evidence of deactivation of brain regions leading up to or during orgasm. The activated brain regions included sensory, motor, reward, frontal cortical, and brainstem regions (eg, nucleus accumbens, insula, anterior cingulate cortex, orbitofrontal cortex, operculum, right angular gyrus, paracentral lobule, cerebellum, hippocampus, amygdala, hypothalamus, ventral tegmental area, and dorsal raphe).
Insight gained from the present findings could provide guidance toward a rational basis for treatment of orgasmic disorders, including anorgasmia.
This is evidently the first fMRI study of orgasm elicited by self- and partner-induced genital stimulation in women. Methodologic solutions to the technical issues posed by excessive head movement and variable latencies to orgasm were successfully applied in the present study, enabling identification of brain regions involved in orgasm. Limitations include the small sample (N = 10), which combined self- and partner-induced stimulation datasets for analysis and which qualify the generalization of our conclusions.
Extensive cortical, subcortical, and brainstem regions reach peak levels of activity at orgasm. Wise NJ, Frangos E, Komisaruk BR. Brain Activity Unique to Orgasm in Women: An fMRI Analysis. J Sex Med 2017;14:1380-1391.
尽管有关女性和男性性唤起期间区域大脑活动的影像学文献广泛且基本一致,但有关性高潮的文献相对较少且存在差异,部分原因是参与者性高潮潜伏期的变异性和头部运动给方法学带来了挑战。
比较女性在性高潮时(自我和伴侣诱导)的大脑活动与生殖器刺激开始时、性高潮开始前和性高潮结束后的大脑活动,并升级获得和分析功能磁共振成像(fMRI)结果的方法。
使用 fMRI,我们在女性参与者对自我和伴侣诱导的阴蒂刺激的不同刺激和性高潮持续时间内,在相同的时间点采集样本。将性高潮的前 20 秒与刺激开始时、性高潮开始前和性高潮结束后的 20 秒进行对比。对全脑和脑干感兴趣区进行了单独的分析。为了对性高潮期进行更精细的分析,我们对感兴趣区进行了时间过程分析。使用定制的热塑整体头颈部固定器,将头部运动最小化至平均小于 1.3 毫米。
10 名女性在 Siemens 3-Trio fMRI 扫描仪中通过自我和伴侣诱导的生殖器刺激获得性高潮。
大脑活动逐渐增加,在性高潮时达到峰值,然后下降。我们没有发现性高潮前或性高潮期间大脑区域去激活的证据。激活的大脑区域包括感觉、运动、奖励、额叶皮质和脑干区域(例如,伏隔核、岛叶、前扣带回皮质、眶额皮质、脑岛、右角回、中央旁小叶、小脑、海马体、杏仁核、下丘脑、腹侧被盖区、中缝背核)。
本研究结果提供的见解可能为治疗性高潮障碍(包括性高潮障碍)提供合理的基础。
本研究显然是第一个使用 fMRI 研究女性通过自我和伴侣诱导的生殖器刺激引起的性高潮。本研究成功应用了针对头部运动过多和性高潮潜伏期变化的技术问题的方法学解决方案,从而确定了与性高潮相关的大脑区域。局限性包括样本量小(N=10),这将自我和伴侣诱导的刺激数据集结合起来进行分析,并限制了我们结论的推广。