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Botox
For Her Vagina?
Botox-Type
Drug Helpful for Vaginal Spasm Disorder may suffer from Vaginismus,
a painful condition in which muscles around the vagina go into
involuntary spasm with little or no provocation. About 10 percent
of women with Vaginismus are not helped by conventional therapy
-- which can include lubricants and anesthetic creams, anti-anxiety
drugs, and Kegel exercises -- but now Iranian researchers have
come up with an alternative in such cases.
Local
injection of botulinum toxin -- better known as Botox -- is an
effective and safe way to treat Vaginismus that has not responded
to other treatments, report Drs. Shirin Ghazizdeh and M. Nikzad
of the Vali-e ASR Reproductive Health Research Center in Tehran.
The researchers tested botulinum toxin injections in 24 women
with severe Vaginismus that had not been cured with previous treatment.
The
women were injected in three sites in muscles on either side of
the vagina while under light sedation. The participants were followed-up
a week later, and then for up to 24 months after the procedure.
One patient refused a vaginal exam the week after the procedure,
but the other 23 who were examined had little or no Vaginismus
at that point, the investigators report in the medical journal
Obstetrics and Gynecology.
Eighteen
of the patients were able to have intercourse successfully after
the first injection. Four reported some pain with intercourse,
and one reported being cured after a second series of injections.
One woman was not able to attempt intercourse with her husband
due to his secondary impotence.
None
of the patients experienced a return of Vaginismus, and all said
they would recommend the injections for others with the condition.
While the botulinum toxin treatment is effective, Ghazizdeh and
Nikzad recommend that patients try other treatments first. "Botulinum
toxin may be appropriate therapy for patients with Vaginismus
who have failed to respond to conventional therapies," the researchers
conclude. "However, therapy with botulinum toxin should be considered
experimental and ideally administered as part of clinical trials."
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