"Sexual health is a state of physical, mental, and social well-being in the area of sexuality. It requires a positive and respectful approach to sexuality and sexual relationships, as well as the possibility of having pleasurable and safe sexual experiences, free from coercion, discrimination, or violence. To achieve and maintain sexual health, the sexual rights of all individuals must be respected, protected, and guaranteed."
— World Health Organization (2012)
Premature ejaculation is not necessarily an anomaly and does not necessarily reflect a health problem (physical or psychological), and especially because premature ejaculation contains many subjective elements with personal feelings that can vary from one man to another or in the same man from one period of his life to another. But it can be treated and improved in men who want it and in particular in men who suffer from it or who say that rapid ejaculation is a problem in their relationships. After a clinical assessment, it is a combination of a medication and a sexological method (perineum work or other) that will most often be proposed, because it is most likely to give a better result.
To have a normal erection, everything starts in our brain: the area of desire and sexual arousal "lights up" and activates the entire system. This area will send the order to the arteries of the penis to open so that blood enters the penis in large quantities and therefore causes an erection. Erection can be reduced by illnesses, an unfavorable context, stress, medication, an anxious or depressive context. After a simple clinical and biological assessment, different tools can be proposed while ensuring that the different aspects of the symptoms are covered by multidisciplinary care if necessary.
Age-related androgen deficiency (ARD) or andropause is a biological phenomenon, similar to the menopause in women, that can affect men between the ages of forty and fifty-five. Unlike women, men do not have a clear milestone such as the cessation of menstruation to mark this transition. Both, however, are characterized by a drop in hormonal levels, the drop in testosterone in men is accompanied by bodily changes as well as changes in attitudes and moods, fatigue, loss of energy, sexual appetite and physical agility. However, all these symptoms can have another origin, including psychological, and only a careful clinical and biological evaluation will allow appropriate management.
Dr. Béatrice Cuzin: Chirurgien urologue
Copyright © 2024 All rights reserved.