Does anybody know if TRT improves penile sensitivity? My sensitivity has gone way down after I was forced off HCG monotherapy earlier this Spring. So far the sensitivity has not returned on TRT. I just started adding HCG to my protocol again, but I'm only two shots in. What causes the loss in penis sensitivity? I don't have diabetes, high cholesterol or blood pressure. I realize libido is a complex thing, but I'm holding out hope that somehow that will re-emerge, but for now is there anything I can take that will improve sensitivity? Do ED medicines help with that?
I find if my e2 is too low or too high it affects hardness, sensitivity and complete engorgement. Cialis at 20 mg enormously helps but not when my e2 has tanked. It's important to become fully engorged for at least 20 minutes a day, without needing to orgasm or ejaculate for healthy maintainence of nerves and the expansive tissues, according to most recent study's. This is something most guys should hset aside alone time either for masterbation or relaxed, non performance oriented pleasuring. Sometimes just exploring areas that otherwise may be ignored or not touched in various ways, levels of pressure, etc can enhance sensitivity.
This is a study done by Lily pharmaceutical, manufacturers of cialis and may be biased but interesting non the less.
Impotence Drug Cialis Might Have Other Sexual Benefits: Study
Impotence Drug Cialis Might Have Other Sexual Benefits: Study
WEDNESDAY, Jan. 30 (HealthDay News) -- Cialis, the erectile dysfunction medication known to help men get ready for sex, may also help encourage ejaculation and orgasm, a new study suggests.
"There are many men who have, at most, very mild problems achieving an erection but who cannot easily ejaculate. Our study shows Cialis works very well for these men with problems ejaculating," lead researcher Dr. Darius Paduch, director of Sexual Health and Medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City, said in a college news release.
In the study, which was funded by Cialis' maker, Eli Lilly and Company, Paduch's team analyzed data from 17 clinical trials involving men with erectile dysfunction and/or trouble ejaculating or achieving orgasm. The trials included almost 3,600 men averaging about 55 years of age. The men typically took Cialis for 12 weeks, at varying doses.
As reported in the February issue of the British Journal of Urology International, Paduch and his colleagues found that about 70 percent of the men who used Cialis (tadalafil) for sexual activity were able to ejaculate most of the time and to reach orgasm, compared with 30 percent of men who did not take the drug.
The improved ability to ejaculate and achieve orgasm was seen despite the severity of a man's erectile dysfunction, according to the researchers.
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Paduch noted that up to 18 percent of men have a normal erection but don't ejaculate, or take a long time to do so. The problem is more common in older men, but affects those of all ages.
"Many of my patients are young men who want to have children and so they want to solve their issues with ejaculation," said Paduch, who is also a urologist and male sexual medicine specialist at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center. "We don't know why this occurs. Every internist faces this problem in his male patients and has no options to offer. Our study shows Cialis may help."
He said that many men have trouble ejaculating and reaching orgasm, but few talk about it. "For decades it was believed that only women had problems with orgasm, but our research shows that orgasmic dysfunction could be as prevalent among men as it is among women," Paduch said.
"More study is needed, but we are hopeful our findings may lead to a treatment for many men who cannot now achieve sexual satisfaction," he added.