Ever wondered what it would be like to have an orgasm for hours? Well, Liz, from Seattle will tell you that it's more of a nightmare than what you would think, UK MailOnline reported.

While the first five minutes were extreme pleasure, the marathon of unwanted sexual spasms that would plague Liz eventually landed her in the hospital.

"Initially it was just after sex but eventually, it got to the point where I could be doing anything from watching TV, walking down the street and I would have an orgasm out of the blue," Liz said.

"I could sometimes hold it off for a short time by holding my breath and I would get out of public situations as quickly as possible. I didn't run my life - my body ran my life for me."

"It was very depressing. It got to the point where I would have as many as 12 spontaneous prolonged orgasms in one day. I was going from specialist to specialist to specialist and they didn't know what to do with me. It was a very hard time in my life," she said.

The unexpected orgasms initially began with a sudden long orgasm which seemed to continue on for a long while, according to UK MailOnline.

"The first five or so minutes were pleasurable," Liz said. "Most people who haven't been through something like this think a half hour long orgasm, an hour-long orgasm, would be an awesome experience. Until you actually experience something like this, that is."

She eventually reached out to doctors when Eric suggested it in hopes of finding a way for the orgasm to stop. But even doctors were left puzzled by her condition.

"Having to walk while having an orgasm is like walking in jello," Liz said. "It's a difficult thing to do. I remember having to put mind over matter to make it work."

The doctors kept asking me, "Are you sure your partner didn't drug you or something like that?" And I was thinking, "Why on Earth would Eric drug me?" she added.

Without the help of medics, the orgasm eventually stopped, UK MailOnline reported.

"At first, it was just sheer disbelief," added Liz of the moment the orgasm finally ended. "I thought it was going to start right back up but it didn't."

"It's a physically, emotionally and mentally taxing experience to have an orgasm for three hours."

Bipolar disorder which had been misdiagnosed as depression and treated with anti-depressants was eventually pinpointed to be the cause of the problem by doctors, UK MailOnline reported.

"Anti-depressants exacerbate multi-orgasmic dysfunction because they actually change brain chemistry, that's their job," said Dr. Irwin Goldstein, director of the Institute of Sexual Medicine in the USA.

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