...or, I'd blame the women for this, but I'm sure the sodomites get headaches too.
From LiveScience.com via Yahoo News:
Porn Viewer Joins Mystifying Sex Headache Club
Every time a young man watched pornography over two years, he experienced a headache so severe he had to stop watching, according to a report of his case.
The headache would develop gradually, beginning within the first five
minutes of the video, and would reach its most severe point within eight
to 10 minutes, according to the neurologists who treated the man, a
24-year-old bachelor in India.
There are two types of "primary headache associated with sexual
activity," as the condition is properly called, and it sounds as if this
man had the less common type, which progresses slowly along with
heightening sexual arousal, Dr. Amy Gelfand, a neurologist at the University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine, said after hearing about the case.
"The more common type is a sudden and severe headache that occurs at orgasm," Gelfand said. The seeming commonness of that headache
may simply be due to the fact that people are more likely to bring them
to medical attention, frightened by their timing, she added.
The researchers who treated the man in India suggested his case was
caused by changes in the pain-sensing nerves in the face and jaw, along
with increased pain sensitivity due to "a heightened emotional state
associated with viewing pornography."
Primary sex headaches strike 1 percent of the population at some point
in life, and are more common in men, Gelfand said. About half of people
who have them also have migraines,
but it's not known whether having migraines raises the likelihood of
having sex headaches, or vice versa – or whether other untold factors
are behind both.
The patient in India — an otherwise healthy man who worked as a
software professional — had no history of migraines or tension headaches
in general, and he reported no previous headaches linked with sexual
activity, including masturbation. He'd had no head injuries or
meningitis infections, the researchers said.
Previous studies have not suggested any link between the headaches and specific sexual behaviors, the researchers said.
The results of the man's physical and neurological exams were
reportedly normal. Gelfand said that is often with the case in people
with primary sex headaches. (In fact, if an exam revealed a physical
cause of the headaches, then by definition, the person would be instead
diagnosed with a "secondary sex headache," she said.)
The man was advised to take a combination of ibuprofen and
acetaminophen half an hour before watching porn, and he reported the
drugs signi?cantly relieved his pain.
In most people, the headaches occur over a period of a few months,
rather than years, Gelfand said. Patients are often treated with a drug
called indomethacin, which is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug
available by prescription in the U.S., and is also used to treat other types of headaches.
The case report was published online June 14 in the journal Archives of Sexual Behavior.
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