PURRGynecology · Aesthetics · Pelvic Floor Recovery
Online · NY, NJ & FL

Low desire is a medical question. Ask it.

Desire has biology: hormones, medications, tissue changes, sleep, and stress all move it. A gynecologist can actually work through that list — most wellness apps can't.

A real differential, not a supplement aisle

Evaluation walks through the medical causes of low desire — hormonal shifts, medication side effects (including antidepressants and birth control), tissue and comfort issues, and life context. Labs are ordered where they'll change the plan.

Treatment options, honestly ranked

Depending on your case: hormone therapy including consideration of testosterone, FDA-approved medications for low desire, treating the treatable (dryness, pain, sleep), and adjusting offenders. What has evidence, what's marginal, and what's marketing — labeled as such.

Connected to in-office care

Where tissue or comfort is part of the picture, in-office options like the Juliet laser and O-Shot are available in the same practice, under the same chart.

Questions, answered

Is low libido really treatable?

Often, yes — especially when a specific cause is found. The honest answer is that results depend on the cause, which is why evaluation comes first.

Will you just prescribe testosterone?

No. Testosterone is one option among several, used when labs and history support it — never as a default.

Can I talk about this by message instead of video?

Much of the evaluation can happen by structured intake and messaging; video is used where conversation helps.

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