Your brain on sex
Understanding
how sex affects your brain can improve your roll in the hay, and it may also shed
light on other parts of your health, says Barry R. Komisaruk, PhD, distinguished
professor of psychology at Rutgers University in Newark, New Jersey. It's not
the easiest subject to study—test subjects might have to masturbate in an MRI
machine—so research is still developing. But scientists are starting to unravel
the mystery. Here's what we know so far about your brain on sex.
Sex is like a drug
Sex makes us feel good. That's why we want it, like it, and spend so much time
hunting for mates. The pleasure we get from sex is largely due to the release
of dopamine, a neurotransmitter that activates the reward center of the brain.
Dopamine is also one of the chemicals responsible for the high people get on
certain drugs. "Taking cocaine and having sex don't feel exactly the same,
but they do involve the same [brain] regions as well as different regions of
the brain," says Timothy Fong, MD, associate professor of psychiatry at
UCLA's David Geffen School of Medicine. Caffeine, nicotine, and chocolate also tickle the reward center,
says Komisaruk.
Sex can act like an antidepressant
A
2002 study out of the University at Albany looked at 300 women and found that
those who had sex without
a condom had
fewer depressive symptoms than women
who did use a condom. The researchers hypothesized that various compounds in
semen, including estrogen and prostaglandin, have antidepressant properties,
which are then absorbed into the body after sex. (They corrected for other
things that might affect both mood and condom
use, such as being in a
serious relationship or use of oral contraceptives.) This is good
news for anyone who is in a committed relationship, but if you're still playing
the field, then you shouldn't give up condoms. There are other ways to boost
mood, but really no other way to prevent sexually transmitted diseases.
Sex can (sometimes) be a downer
Those
feel-good chemicals may be going full blast during the act, but after?
According to researchers, there is such a thing as post-sex blues (technical term: postcoital
dysphoria). About one-third of the women participating in one study reported
having experienced sadness after sex at some point in time. While
it's possible that regret or feeling coerced might be the reason why,
researchers can't explain the connection at this point for sure.
Sex relieves pain
Don't
skip sex when you have a headache. Research shows that doing the deed may relieve your symptoms. In a 2013
German study, 60% of participants who had migraines and 30% of cluster-headache
sufferers who had sex during a
headache episode reported partial
or total relief. Other studies have found that women who stimulated an area of
the G spot had an elevation in pain threshold. "It took greater pain
stimulus for them to feel the pain," says Beverly Whipple, PhD, a
professor emerita at Rutgers University who has conducted some research on the
topic. Whipple didn't study why this was so, but other researchers have
attributed the effect to oxytocin, the so-called bonding hormone that helps
mothers and babies bond and which also has pain-relieving
properties.
Sex can wipe your memory clean
Each
year, fewer than 7 people per 100,000 experience "global transient
amnesia," a sudden but temporary loss
of memory that can't be
attributed to any other neurological condition. The condition can be brought on
by vigorous sex, as well as
emotional stress, pain, minor head injuries, medical procedures, and jumping
into hot or cold water. The forgetfulness can last a few minutes or a few hours.
During an episode, a person cannot form new memories or remember very recent
events. Fortunately, there seem to be no lasting effects.
Sex may boost your memory
Or
at least it might if you're a rodent. A 2010 study found that, compared with
rats who were allowed only one one-night stand, rodents who engaged in
"chronic" sex (once a day for 14 consecutive days) grew more neurons in the hippocampus, a region of the brain associated with memory. The findings
were backed up by a second study, also in mice. It remains to be seen if
regular sex also has this effect in humans (but you can always tell yourself it
does).
Sex calms you down
The
same study that linked frequent sex to a brain boost in rats also found that
the rats were less stressed. This works for humans, too. One study found that
people who'd just had sexual intercourse had better responses to stressful situations like public speaking than people who
had not, or who had engaged in other types of sexual activity. How did sex ease stress? In this case, by lowering blood
pressure.
Sex makes you sleepy
Sex
is more likely to make men sleepy than women, and scientists think they
know why: The part of the brain known as the prefrontal cortex winds down after
ejaculation. This, along with the release of oxytocin and serotonin, may
account for the "rolling over and falling
asleep" syndrome.
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