Orgasm + Arousal
A more supportive, more precise approach to orgasm and arousal concerns — with thoughtful evaluation of physical, hormonal, emotional, relational, and medication-related contributors so treatment feels individualized and actually useful.
Problems with arousal or orgasm are common, but they still deserve real evaluation.
Many patients arrive feeling isolated, frustrated, or unsure whether what they are experiencing is “normal.” The strongest version of this page should make clear that orgasm and arousal concerns are legitimate sexual health issues — and that good care starts by understanding the full context rather than collapsing everything into one explanation.
Arousal and orgasm can be influenced by hormones, pain with sex, relationship factors, menopause, medications, mood, pelvic floor dysfunction, and broader sexual wellness patterns. A strong visit helps sort through those layers.
Desire and response are not the same
Arousal concerns may involve difficulty feeling physically responsive, mentally engaged, or sexually activated even when desire is present.
Orgasm issues can take different forms
Some patients report delayed orgasm, absent orgasm, inconsistent orgasm, or orgasm that feels significantly less intense than it used to.
The body may be part of the pattern
Hormonal changes, pain, pelvic floor tension, medication side effects, and other medical factors can influence arousal and orgasm.
Sexual function is not purely mechanical
Stress, anxiety, shame, trauma history, relationship strain, and expectations can all affect how pleasure and orgasm are experienced.
Private, respectful, and genuinely clarifying.
The strongest version of this page tells patients that the consultation is not about judgment or vague reassurance. It is about careful sexual health history, pattern recognition, and figuring out what is actually getting in the way.
That may include reviewing pain, hormones, medications, menopause-related changes, pelvic floor issues, or relationship and emotional factors that are affecting the experience of intimacy.
Sexual response deserves a full-context review
- Detailed review of arousal and orgasm changes
- Sexual history and distress-level assessment
- Hormone and menopause-related symptom discussion when relevant
- Medication review for sexual side effects
- Pain, pelvic floor, and lubrication-related discussion
- Relationship, stress, and emotional context review
- Hormone-related treatment options when appropriate
- Management of pain or arousal-related contributors
- Pelvic floor therapy referral when useful
- Medication review or adjustment discussion
- Counseling or sex therapy support
- Personalized sexual wellness planning based on the pattern
Frequently asked questions
Concerns may include difficulty getting aroused, reduced physical response, delayed orgasm, absent orgasm, less intense orgasm, or distress around changes in sexual response.
Yes. Hormonal changes, especially around menopause and other endocrine shifts, can affect sexual response in some patients.
Yes. Some medications can affect desire, arousal, lubrication, and orgasm, which is why medication review is often part of the workup.
Not always. Emotional health, relationship dynamics, stress, sexual pain, body confidence, and past experiences can all influence orgasm and arousal.
If sexual response changes are persistent, distressing, affecting intimacy, or making you feel unlike yourself, it is worth scheduling a dedicated sexual wellness evaluation.
Ready for a more supportive sexual wellness conversation?
If orgasm or arousal concerns are affecting intimacy or quality of life in Los Angeles, request a consultation with Joshua R. Gonzalez, MD.
Los Angeles, CA 90036
(323) 607-2895
Monday–Friday: 9:00 AM–5:00 PM