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Androgen
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A type of hormone responsible for the development of male characteristics; testosterone is the most well-known androgen.
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Anorgasmia
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ICD-11 diagnosis for men and women who experience absent, infrequent, or diminished orgasms; also called orgasmic dysfunction, its name in ICD-10.
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Antiandrogens
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Drugs that reduce levels of male sex hormones such as testosterone, thereby decreasing sexual interest.
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Bisexuals
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People who are attracted to both sexes.
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Chemical castration
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Use of antiandrogens to bring testosterone levels as low as those found in people who have been surgically castrated.
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Cisgender
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Term for people whose gender identity and birth sex match.
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Closeted
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Nonheterosexual people who have yet to come out.
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Coercive sexual sadism
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ICD-11 paraphilic disorder characterized by fantasies, urges and behaviors involving physically or psychologically imposing harm on nonconsenting others.
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Coming out
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Process by which people come to accept and declare their sexual orientation or gender identity to others.
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Compulsive sexual behavior disorder
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An ICD-11 impulse control disorder diagnosable in people who seem unable to control their sexual appetites.
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Conversion therapy
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Therapy to turn homosexuals into heterosexuals; popular in the past, but almost universally rejected today as unethical.
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Covert sensitization
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Aversion therapy in which an unpleasant image is presented (in vivo or imaginally) while the client focuses on the paraphilic interest; the goal is to associate the paraphilic interest with the unpleasant image in order to lessen the behavior.
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Cross-sex hormonal treatment
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Prescription of sex hormones (androgens, estrogens, and antiandrogens) to alter people’s physical appearance as they transition from one sex to the other; also called hormone therapy.
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Delayed ejaculation
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DSM-5 diagnosis for men who show a delay in (or inability to) ejaculate despite being stimulated and wanting to ejaculate more quickly.
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Dyspareunia
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ICD-10 diagnosis for women and men who experience pain during intercourse—sometimes with no physical basis and other times with evidence of psychological factors (such as past sexual abuse); also in ICD-11, where it must have physical determinants.
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