TY - JOUR T1 - Sexual activity after myocardial infarction JF - Canadian Medical Association Journal JO - CMAJ SP - 1250 LP - 1253 VL - 116 IS - 11 AU - T. Kavanagh AU - R. J. Shephard Y1 - 1977/06/04 UR - http://www.cmaj.ca/content/116/11/1250.abstract N2 - Questionnaires on sexual activity were completed by 161 patients attending an exercise-centred rehabilitation program an average of some 3 years after a myocardial infarction. In almost half the group, sexual activity was unchanged or increased compared with the period before the infarction. In the remainder it was reduced; this group included 29 men who had adopted a more passive sexual role and 26 who were now having angina or ventricular premature beats during intercourse. Although the patients with diminished activity could not be distinguished by means of formal personality test, questionnaires completed by their wives suggested that they were less willing to assume responsibility, had increased difficulty in adjusting to life at home and at work and were more neurotic and depressed than those with normal or increased activity. Furthermore, those with decreased sexual activity had a poorer response to training in terms of attendance, final average jogging distance and gains in physiologic status. Since the frequency of angina and ventricular premature beats was less during intercourse than during standard laboratory exercise, it was concluded that normal sexual relations carry no special risk for the average postcoronary patient; indeed, by enhancing self-esteem and encouraging effective participation in an exercise programm, acceptance of normal sexual activity may improve the prognosis. ER -