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1 -demand (as needed, 1-3 h before anticipated sexual activity).
2 tarting at 50 mg adjustable to 100 mg before sexual activity.
3 mmon in young women in their first decade of sexual activity.
4 lved in feeding, fear, thermoregulation, and sexual activity.
5 e subjects maintained a Web-based journal of sexual activity.
6 y less likely than men at all ages to report sexual activity.
7 y target younger women, before initiation of sexual activity.
8 ncer screening to within 3 years of onset of sexual activity.
9 family relationships, social activities, and sexual activity.
10 r surgical history and level of physical and sexual activity.
11 ct that we experimentally link to changes in sexual activity.
12 nse to exogenous ovarian hormones and during sexual activity.
13 are mother-to-child, blood transfusion, and sexual activity.
14 dy drug or placebo 1 hour before anticipated sexual activity.
15 ing whether HHV-8 can be transmitted through sexual activity.
16 ricitabine (FTC) or placebo before and after sexual activity.
17 eties also place constraints on marriage and sexual activity.
18 The relative risk of nonfatal MI following sexual activity.
19 ical monitoring, reporting on condom use and sexual activity.
20 any sexual orientation or level of reported sexual activity.
21 V was common (18.6%) and not associated with sexual activity.
22 , breast-feeding, and energy expended during sexual activity.
23 afer-sex counseling and completed diaries of sexual activity.
24 l dryness and dyspareunia with impairment in sexual activity.
25 en treatment, and most patients could resume sexual activity.
26 re recorded during the customary time of its sexual activity.
27 oductive hormones, adult size, strength, and sexual activity.
28 al to an uninfected person via sexual or non-sexual activities.
29 18-134) followed by MSM reporting high-risk sexual activity (26; 95% CrI, 6-66) and low-frequency ID
31 2.34; 95% CI, 1.14-4.82), and more frequent sexual activity (adjusted HR per additional sex act per
33 d physicians counsel patients about resuming sexual activity after acute myocardial infarction (AMI),
39 ly low, the absolute risk increase caused by sexual activity also is extremely low (1 chance in a mil
41 atient reported injection drug use (IDU) and sexual activity among men who have sex with men (MSM).
44 , the CLI rats exhibited significantly lower sexual activities and also exhibited (1). significant de
46 ealed that 57% did not have documentation of sexual activity and 47% did not have documentation of re
48 Self-report was a poor predictor of recent sexual activity and condom use in this study, regardless
52 sical and mental health could greatly affect sexual activity and fulfilment, but the nature of associ
55 t for the direct phenotypic tradeoff between sexual activity and immunity by studying the antibacteri
57 A multivariate model was used to predict sexual activity and included demographic, medical, and p
58 ls to include groups of people isolated from sexual activity and individuals exposed to a mild and lo
60 nts in musth--an annual period of heightened sexual activity and intensified aggression--broadcast od
61 st the neural substrates activated by social/sexual activity and involved in response to intruders.
62 ic physical activity and SCD (P < .001), and sexual activity and MI (P = .04); in all cases, individu
63 the association between episodic physical or sexual activity and myocardial infarction (MI) or sudden
64 relationship between fluoxetine's effect on sexual activity and neuroendocrine disturbances and illu
65 ds in the behaviors of some groups with high sexual activity and of the general population in some co
66 sociodemographic characteristics as well as sexual activity and past history of antecedent illnesses
67 further increases in scores for frequency of sexual activity and pleasure-orgasm in the Brief index o
68 02 for trend), concurrent with a decrease in sexual activity and proportion of sex acts occurring whe
70 h is independently associated with decreased sexual activity and satisfaction at all ages in Britain.
73 a high-risk sex; and, for HCV, via high-risk sexual activity and the sharing of noninjecting crack-us
74 ntions in NIUs must seek to reduce high-risk sexual activity and the sharing of noninjecting drug-use
76 c physical activity, 3 studies investigating sexual activity, and 1 study investigating both exposure
79 ercourse, urban/nonurban residence, years of sexual activity, and having had sex with a man were asso
80 plus OFS had more menopausal symptoms, lower sexual activity, and inferior health-related quality of
81 This most likely reflects underreporting of sexual activity, and it is possible that intravaginal cl
82 etween acquisition of cytomegalovirus (CMV), sexual activity, and sexually transmitted diseases, 245
83 rette smoking, alcohol and illicit drug use, sexual activity, and violent behavior remain significant
84 n and the feasibility of satisfactoriness of sexual activity as assessed both by the men and by their
86 was associated with significantly increased sexual activity, as assessed by the Psychosexual Daily Q
87 UAI, resulting in a sustained decline in the sexual activity associated with the highest risk of HIV
88 race, region, infectious agents, uric acid, sexual activity, autoimmunity, prostate-specific antigen
89 e, and some people might engage in impulsive sexual activity because they are easily aroused by eroti
91 vious 2 days, with no difference in reported sexual activity between interview modes (12.5% ACASI vs.
93 ere associated with increased probability of sexual activity but not with decreased probability of us
94 were more likely than women to have resumed sexual activity by 1 month (448 [63.9%] vs 661 [54.5%];
100 hat sexual behavior profiles of high and low sexual activity categories may be converging and may cal
101 amined with respect to self-reported data on sexual activity collected over the 2 preceding months.
102 etermine timing and pattern of menstruation, sexual activity, contraception, and incidence of pregnan
103 ants" approach, we focus here on patterns of sexual activity, contraceptive use, and post-conception
104 eness, and observational ratings of agonism, sexual activity, daring behaviors, teasing, silent bluff
109 ously negative tests was not associated with sexual activity during the interval since the preceding
111 ritical period predicts early maturation and sexual activity, elevated hormone production, and more c
112 Libiguins are limonoids with highly potent sexual activity enhancing effects, originally isolated f
113 should be multifaceted, focusing on delay of sexual activity especially in younger teens while promot
114 Sexual Function Inventory-female version, a sexual activity event log, and the Hamilton Depression R
115 actinemia can be physiologically found after sexual activities, exercise, lactation, during pregnancy
117 activity in the past month; of these 46.0%, sexual activity for 41.5% involved noncohabiting partner
119 al behavior before castration and maintained sexual activity for a longer duration after castration c
120 l data on chlamydia positivity, estimates of sexual activity from the National Survey of Family Growt
121 , to evaluate gender differences in baseline sexual activity, function, and patient experience with p
123 to elucidate risk and protective factors for sexual activity in adolescence and to evaluate the succe
126 sterone (T) were more effective in restoring sexual activity in castrated KN males than IL males.
127 estored sexual behavior but failed to elicit sexual activity in castrated, progesterone-insensitive m
128 e 24 hours preceding MI, and 27(3%) reported sexual activity in the 2 hours preceding onset of sympto
131 cell count, 478 cells/mm(3)), 46.0% reported sexual activity in the past month; of these 46.0%, sexua
132 ssed for recency of last sexual intercourse, sexual activity in the prior year, and contraceptive pra
139 That this organism engages in clandestine sexual activity is also suggested by observations of two
141 was limited because exposure to physical and sexual activity is infrequent and their effect is transi
142 stingly, the temperature-induced increase in sexual activity is specific toward male partners, becaus
143 tween behaviors associated with high and low sexual activity may have important implications for theo
144 Evidence has suggested that physical and sexual activity might be triggers of acute cardiac event
145 bidity can hinder manual labour and vigorous sexual activity might lead to penile implant extrusion.
146 satisfaction (MnD, -0.2; P = .01), and lower sexual activity (MnD, -0.1; P = .02) compared with sibli
147 Quantitative data on onset and degree of sexual activity, numbers of partners, concurrent partner
151 society; reputations and social displays of sexual activity or inactivity are important; and social
152 adjusted for study site and risk behaviors (sexual activity or injection drug use) were estimated us
154 ve before the AMI, but little is known about sexual activity or sexual function after the event.
155 ts and behaviors that center on intimacy and sexual activities other than intercourse (e.g., 'flexibl
156 and sexually abusive behaviors toward wives, sexual activities outside marriage, sexually transmitted
159 ciated with 1 hour of additional physical or sexual activity per week was estimated as 2 to 3 per 10,
160 the measured associations was largest in low-sexual-activity populations, cross-sectional studies, an
162 39-0.56) and an increase in sexual activity (Sexual Activity Questionnaire habit subscale; P=.027; ef
163 sion (CES-D), and the Medical Outcomes Study Sexual Activity Questionnaire in a substudy of 1983 part
165 alth prevention messages should target risky sexual activities rather than a person's sexual identity
168 ing antimalarial molecules with dual asexual/sexual activity, representing starting points for target
169 associated with indulgence in overeating and sexual activity, respectively, and provide evidence for
175 ; effect size, 0.39-0.56) and an increase in sexual activity (Sexual Activity Questionnaire habit sub
176 on of CMV in these women was associated with sexual activity, sexually transmitted diseases, and sign
177 his finding, another type of natural reward (sexual activity) similarly reduces stress responses.
178 scordant C. trachomatis strains who reported sexual activity since treatment denied a new sexual part
179 d with HIV acquisition risk: gender, marital/sexual activity status, geographic location, "key popula
181 unseling patients and decreasing the fear of sexual activity that often prevents complete rehabilitat
182 was not significantly related to duration of sexual activity, the lifetime number of sex partners, or
183 ation from the genitalia to the brain during sexual activity, the mesolimbic dopamine circuits of rew
184 cantly associated with episodic physical and sexual activity; this association was attenuated among p
185 representation of age, sex, heterogeneity in sexual activity, variable infectiousness, and different
186 ve risk of MI occurring in the 2 hours after sexual activity was 2.5(95% confidence interval [CI], 1.
188 ability and depressive symptoms, and reduced sexual activity was associated with chronic airways dise
189 at the birth of the first child, and teenage sexual activity was collected in face-to-face interviews
192 Characteristics associated with loss of sexual activity were assessed using multinomial logistic
195 Both injection-drug use and correlates of sexual activity were risk factors for HHV-8 infection in
197 yses, factors associated with not discussing sexual activity with a physician included female gender
199 ected persons engaging in repeated high-risk sexual activity with an HIV-1-infected partner were pros
201 eported a lifetime history of any consensual sexual activity with another man; 9.6% (n = 164) reporte
203 in misguided efforts to retain satisfactory sexual activity, with secondary worsening of cardiac cap
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