# Sex, drugs, and arousal—two randomized trials on the effects of ketamine on sexual arousal and calcarine gyrus activity

**Authors:** Manfred Klöbl, Thomas Liebe, Gregor Dörl, Peter Stöhrmann, Clemens Schmidt, Elisa Briem, Christian Milz, Gabriel Schlosser, Maximilian Kathofer, David Gomola, Godber Mathis Godbersen, Julia Sophia Crone, Rupert Lanzenberger, Marie Spies

PMC · DOI: 10.1177/20451253251406059 · 2026-02-12

## TL;DR

Ketamine reduces sexual arousal in men and women and changes brain activity in a sex-specific way, which may explain its role in chemsex.

## Contribution

The study reveals sex-specific effects of ketamine on sexual arousal and calcarine gyrus activity using fMRI.

## Key findings

- Subacute S-ketamine reduced sexual arousal to heterosexual stimuli in women and lesbian stimuli in men.
- Late racemic ketamine decreased arousal to heterosexual stimuli in men and increased aversion to gay stimuli in women.
- Ketamine reduced calcarine gyrus activation in men compared to women, independent of sexual arousal.

## Abstract

Ketamine, a well-established antidepressant and dissociative anesthetic, is also used recreationally in the club and chemsex scene. Survey and qualitative data suggest that while ketamine facilitates chemsex encounters, it diminishes the intensity of the sexual experience.

To investigate this phenomenon from a neuroscientific perspective while considering ketamine’s sex-specific effects.

Two randomized, placebo-controlled crossover studies using intranasal S-ketamine (double-blinded) or intravenous racemic ketamine (single-blinded).

Subjective sexual arousal in response to a newly compiled set of erotic stimuli was assessed following subacute S-ketamine and late racemic ketamine administration across two studies. Overall, 67 healthy volunteers (26 females) participated in the studies. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was performed during sexual arousal assessment under late racemic ketamine exposure, with both studies also incorporating resting-state fMRI assessments.

Subacute S-ketamine reduced sexual arousal to heterosexual stimuli in women (β = −0.21, CI95 = (−0.36, −0.06)) and, to a lesser extent, to lesbian stimuli in men (β = −0.16, CI95 = (0.003, −0.33)). It also diminished sexual aversion to gay stimuli in both sexes (β ⩾ 0.18, CI95 ⩾ (0.03, 0.32)). Conversely, late racemic ketamine decreased sexual arousal to heterosexual stimuli in men (β = −0.17, CI95 = (−0.31, −0.02)) while exacerbating sexual aversion to gay stimuli in women (β = −0.24, CI95=(−0.36,−0.12)). Furthermore, late ketamine administration resulted in reduced calcarine gyrus activation in men compared to women, independent of sexual arousal (β ⩽ −0.23, CI95 ⩽ (−0.52, 0.05)). This finding was confirmed for resting activity under subacute ketamine (β = −0.18, CI95 = (−0.32, −0.04)).

Our results align with reports of diminished sexual arousal under ketamine, while the reduced sexual aversion may play a role in facilitating chemsex. The heightened sexual aversion in women and the distinct calcarine gyrus activity modulation may relate to previously documented sex-dependent ketamine effects on stress resilience and psychosis-like symptoms.

Both studies were registered at clinicaltrials.gov: NCT05320120 (2022-04-08), NCT05320107 (2022-04-08).

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** ketamine (PubChem CID 3821), S-ketamine (PubChem CID 182137)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** psychosis (MESH:D011618)
- **Chemicals:** ketamine (-), Ketamine (MESH:D007649), S-ketamine (MESH:C000629870)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

12 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12901892/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12901892