Does heightened subjective sexual arousal lower pain in women if disgust is minimized?

It has been proposed that acute pain can generally be reduced by sexual activity. Increasing subjective sexual arousal might thus help reduce pain during sex. Yet, in conflict with the view that subjective sexual arousal would generally reduce pain, previous research has failed to find that presenti...

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Main Authors: Lara Lakhsassi, Charmaine Borg, Peer Briken, Peter J de Jong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0323095
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author Lara Lakhsassi
Charmaine Borg
Peer Briken
Peter J de Jong
author_facet Lara Lakhsassi
Charmaine Borg
Peer Briken
Peter J de Jong
author_sort Lara Lakhsassi
collection DOAJ
description It has been proposed that acute pain can generally be reduced by sexual activity. Increasing subjective sexual arousal might thus help reduce pain during sex. Yet, in conflict with the view that subjective sexual arousal would generally reduce pain, previous research has failed to find that presenting a sexually arousing film stimulus attenuates pain during a cold pressor test (CPT) in women. This might be due to the sexually arousing film having also elicited disgust. Therefore, this study tested whether subjective sexual arousal could generally reduce pain, provided that concurrently-elicited disgust is minimized. Female undergraduates with no sexual dysfunction were randomly distributed through a digital list randomizer to either watch: a porn film that can elicit similar levels of disgust and sexual arousal, a porn film that elicits greater subjective sexual arousal than disgust, or a neutral train ride film (N = 174). A CPT was utilized for pain induction while simultaneously viewing the assigned films. Pain was indexed by subjective ratings of pain intensity, and CPT duration. The results showed no differences in pain intensity or pain tolerance across conditions. Thus, in this study, disgust appeared no critical moderator of the relationship between sexual arousal and pain. The findings converge to the conclusion that, in women, subjective sexual arousal does not generally reduce the experience of pain. This might also imply that increasing subjective sexual arousal alone might not be sufficient to reduce genital pain, though further research is needed to test this inference given that pain sensitivities may differ across the body.
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spelling doaj-art-d7d9764cf7d24644b0f575a622cd481b2025-08-20T03:53:57ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01205e032309510.1371/journal.pone.0323095Does heightened subjective sexual arousal lower pain in women if disgust is minimized?Lara LakhsassiCharmaine BorgPeer BrikenPeter J de JongIt has been proposed that acute pain can generally be reduced by sexual activity. Increasing subjective sexual arousal might thus help reduce pain during sex. Yet, in conflict with the view that subjective sexual arousal would generally reduce pain, previous research has failed to find that presenting a sexually arousing film stimulus attenuates pain during a cold pressor test (CPT) in women. This might be due to the sexually arousing film having also elicited disgust. Therefore, this study tested whether subjective sexual arousal could generally reduce pain, provided that concurrently-elicited disgust is minimized. Female undergraduates with no sexual dysfunction were randomly distributed through a digital list randomizer to either watch: a porn film that can elicit similar levels of disgust and sexual arousal, a porn film that elicits greater subjective sexual arousal than disgust, or a neutral train ride film (N = 174). A CPT was utilized for pain induction while simultaneously viewing the assigned films. Pain was indexed by subjective ratings of pain intensity, and CPT duration. The results showed no differences in pain intensity or pain tolerance across conditions. Thus, in this study, disgust appeared no critical moderator of the relationship between sexual arousal and pain. The findings converge to the conclusion that, in women, subjective sexual arousal does not generally reduce the experience of pain. This might also imply that increasing subjective sexual arousal alone might not be sufficient to reduce genital pain, though further research is needed to test this inference given that pain sensitivities may differ across the body.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0323095
spellingShingle Lara Lakhsassi
Charmaine Borg
Peer Briken
Peter J de Jong
Does heightened subjective sexual arousal lower pain in women if disgust is minimized?
PLoS ONE
title Does heightened subjective sexual arousal lower pain in women if disgust is minimized?
title_full Does heightened subjective sexual arousal lower pain in women if disgust is minimized?
title_fullStr Does heightened subjective sexual arousal lower pain in women if disgust is minimized?
title_full_unstemmed Does heightened subjective sexual arousal lower pain in women if disgust is minimized?
title_short Does heightened subjective sexual arousal lower pain in women if disgust is minimized?
title_sort does heightened subjective sexual arousal lower pain in women if disgust is minimized
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0323095
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