“…Therefore, even though psychorelational issues and sociocultural factors should always be ruled out, there is no doubt that biological aspects, including sex hormone deficiency, as well as other medical conditions and medications which may cause a neuroendocrine imbalance, play a major role in the clinical manifestation of sexual problems that induce personal distress and, therefore, may require intervention 26,27. Indeed, the iatrogenic removal of both ovaries, which may occur well before the age of natural menopause, is characterized by the effects of acute estrogen and even androgen deprivation in several domains of sexual function (desire, arousal, lubrication, orgasm, satisfaction) and has been significantly associated with HSDD and severity of other menopausal symptoms such as vaginal dryness 28–30. Following bilateral oophorectomy, both premenopausally and postmenopausally, there is a sudden 50% fall in circulating testosterone (T) levels which have been associated with the so-called androgen-insufficiency syndrome; an increasingly accepted clinical entity comprising specific symptoms such as low sexual desire, persistent and inexplicable fatigue, blunted motivation and a general reduced sense of well-being 31.…”