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Introduction: Sexuality and sexual health of people with disabilities have been neglected by the health care system
across the country and region for a long period of time. Disabled people face dominant social norms that primarily hold
them to be asexual and childlike, without any desire and undesirable. Although some physical disabilities directly affect
sexuality by the disablement of genital function, most of them do not. At the national level, sexual health statistics for disabled
people are almost non-existent.
Materials and methods: Evidence from all the relevant articles and bibliographic sources referring to sexual health
of disabled people has been analyzed and reviewed.
Results: The study identified specific and nonspecific mechanisms affecting sexual function in people with
locomotor disabilities. Specific mechanisms, such as neuro-autonomic mechanisms and neuromuscular mechanisms have
been determined. Impairment of sexual function through neuro-autonomic mechanism occurs in transverse spinal cord
injuries and in other pathologies involving the sympathetic and parasympathetic spinal center segments, reflex pathways, and sensory pathways. Through the neuromuscular mechanism, the importance of motor control on sexual function was
recognized. The impairment of motor control has been identified at three levels: cerebral motor neuron damage (cortical
and subcortical), spinal motor neuron damage, and lesions of peripheral nervous structures and muscles. More than
that, the neuromuscular mechanism was identified to be responsible for affecting the sexual function of people with locomotor
disabilities in most of the cases, the neuro-autonomic mechanism being an optional one, met mostly in transverse spinal
injuries. Regarding nonspecific mechanisms, the following ones were defined: genital mechanisms, complementary
pathological mechanisms, psychosocial mechanisms, and iatrogenic mechanisms.
Conclusions: Existing studies on the sexual health of people with locomotor disabilities are limited and statistics are
almost non-existent, most of them approaching this issue from a social perspective rather than from a medical one. Most
studies emphasize the need for sexual health services for people with disabilities, pointing, at the same time, at the low
competence of health care providers. Defining the mechanisms which affect sexual function in people with locomotor
disabilities and developing the patient-centered assessment algorithm on sexual health for people with locomotor
disabilities represent a special practical interest both in clinical practice as well as for further studies on patients. |
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