Women under 50 who undergo hysterectomy with oophorectomy twice as likely as women of her age has not yet recognized the hysterectomy experience low sexual desire. Decreased desire hysterectomy in women age 50 are three times more frequently than low sexual desire than non-hysterectomy pain.
That's according to a recent study by Sandra Leiblum and other researchers from the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, published in 2006 in the menopausal years, the journal of the American Society of menopause. The study also showed that women 50 and older have undergone hysterectomy are more likely to experience low desire, low or their desire to be the same women at risk of working age, of course, menopause. One thousand women, 20-70 years, completed a questionnaire on their physical, mental and social health, sexual function and sexual satisfaction and relationship satisfaction.
Decreased willingness to intervene with womans sexual gratification, the desire to create difference in the sexual relationship, and associated with low arousal, orgasm, less sexual desire, the researchers say.
The woman began with low sexual libido, less often, rarely or never masturbated, relationship dissatisfaction, and reported a higher frequency. Low libido in women also reported more problems with physical health, mental and social.
Although no apparent cause was the reduction of sexual desire, have these and other studies have found a strong relationship between negative mood and lack of emotional well-being are important factors in sexual distress.


