Spice up your life with a personalized approach based on your unique needs
Topical Hormones
Testosterone cream (low-dose)
Estradiol and/or progesterone
DHEA (vaginal or oral)
- PT-141 (Bremelanotide) — FDA-approved, boosts desire by activating brain centers
- Flibanserin (Addyi) — FDA-approved for premenopausal women with HSDD
Sexual Wellness
Clinically-proven ingredients
No office visit required
Prescription form: tablets, injectables, or creams
PT - 141
PT-141 is a peptide therapy that addresses sexual wellness, enhancing libido and improving sexual function for both men and women.
- Enhanced Libido: Boosts sexual desire in both men and women.
- Improved Sexual Function: Addresses sexual dysfunction for better intimacy.
- Non-Hormonal Solution: A safe, hormone-free option for sexual wellness.
Testosterone Topical cream
DHEA topical Cream
Low Libido in Women
Low libido is multifactorial—driven by physical, hormonal, neurological, emotional, and psychosocial elements.
Hormonal Factors
- Testosterone deficiency – Even in females, low T can reduce sexual desire, sensitivity, and fantasies.
- Low estrogen (E2) – Leads to vaginal dryness, thinning tissue, reduced blood flow, and discomfort with intimacy.
- Low progesterone – Impacts mood, anxiety, sleep, and GABA tone, indirectly affecting desire.
- High Sex hormone binding globulin – Binds free sex hormones, lowering availability.
- Thyroid imbalance (hypo/hyper) – Fatigue, weight gain, depression, or anxiety can reduce libido.
- High prolactin – Suppresses gonadotropins and can blunt sexual desire.
- Menopause & perimenopause – Rapid hormone shifts and resulting vaginal atrophy, insomnia, and hot flashes.
Neurological / Brain-Based Factors
- Dopamine deficiency – Dopamine drives desire, reward, and motivation.
- Low catecholamines (NE/Epi) – Reduce energy, arousal, and pleasure.
- Chronic brain inflammation – Linked to neuroinflammation, affecting mood and sexual drive.
- Low melatonin – Impairs circadian rhythm and suppresses sex hormones at night.
Psychosocial and Emotional Factors
- Stress and cortisol dysregulation – Chronic stress suppresses HPG axis.
- History of trauma or abuse
- Anxiety or depression
- Body image insecurity
- Shy or inhibited personality
- Relationship dissatisfaction or conflict
- Lack of emotional intimacy or foreplay
- Parental fatigue, caregiving burnout
Medical and Lifestyle Factors
- Vaginal dryness or pain (dyspareunia) – Due to low estrogen, Sjögren’s syndrome, or pelvic floor dysfunction.
- Chronic illness – Autoimmune disease, diabetes, obesity, anemia, or cardiovascular disease.
- Medications – SSRIs, oral contraceptives, antihypertensives, antipsychotics, opioids.
- Nutrient deficiencies – Iron, B12, zinc, magnesium, vitamin D, omega-3s.
- Insomnia or poor sleep hygiene
- Substance use – Alcohol, cannabis, or nicotine
Management and Treatment Strategies
1. Comprehensive Evaluation
2. Hormonal Support
- Testosterone replacement (topical, vaginal, or injecgtions)
- Topical estradiol (vaginal ring/cream for tissue regeneration)
- Oral or transdermal estrogen (systemic E2 to support mood and energy)
- Micronized progesterone (improves sleep & mood)
- DHEA vaginal suppositories – Restore moisture, elasticity, and local testosterone
3. Peptides and Medications
- Bremelanotide (Vyleesi, PT-141) –boosts arousal within 45 min; FDA-approved
- Flibanserin (Addyi) – Acts on serotonin/dopamine; taken daily at bedtime
- Oxytocin (nasal spray or sublingual) – Enhances bonding, trust, and arousal
- Melatonin – Supports circadian rhythm and hormone balance (1–3 mg nightly)
- Selank/Semax – Neurorestorative peptides (experimental, not FDA-approved)
4. Nutritional & Lifestyle Support
- Correct deficiencies: Zinc, magnesium, B6/B12, vitamin D, omega-3s
- Adaptogenic herbs: Maca, ashwagandha, rhodiola, damiana
- Mediterranean or anti-inflammatory diet
- Weight optimization – Visceral fat reduces testosterone and raises estrogen
- Exercise – Especially strength training, which boosts testosterone and dopamine
- Sleep hygiene – Prioritize 7–9 hours of restorative sleep
5. Emotional, Psychosocial, and Integrative Therapies
- Sex therapy or somatic therapy
- Trauma-informed therapy (EMDR, IFS, or psychodynamic)
- Couples counseling or family therapy
- Mindfulness and body-awareness practices
- Neurofeedback or vagal tone stimulation (if stress-related inhibition is high)
6. Alternative and Adjunctive Approaches
- PRP (O-Shot) – Platelet-rich plasma for clitoral/vaginal rejuvenation
- Red light therapy (LLLT) – May improve circulation and tissue quality
- Vaginal lasers (e.g., MonaLisa Touch) – Improve vaginal elasticity and lubrication