When a man can't climax
Culprits include medications, disease, ugly divorces
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F.Birchman / MSNBC.com |
Sexploration — By Brian Alexander |
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Q: I am a 49-year-old male and at times I have trouble ejaculating. I seem to build up to the point of ejaculation, but then it subsides and yet I remain erect. Why is this?
A: When you were 20, I bet you wished you could hold back that leap over the falls, no?
What you have, my fallow friend, is called delayed ejaculation or anorgasmia (which literally means no orgasm at all, but the two are sometimes used interchangeably).
Read through the rest of this week’s questions and answers for more information on why you might be experiencing this, but one reason could be your age. Sorry. The older we guys get, the longer it takes us.
You could argue — and I say why not? — that this makes you a much better lover than your average 25-year-old slam-bam “Whoops! Uh, sorry” guy. Women needn’t worry about your staying power.
But if it troubles you, and I guess it does or you wouldn’t be asking, see a urologist who specializes in male sexual dysfunction to work through the possibilities you’ll find below.
Q: I’m a single male who can maintain an erection but can't ejaculate when having sex, although I am able to when I masturbate. Three years ago I had surgery on a disk in my lower back, and have been taking Paxil for a year. Could this be the cause of my inability to climax? My doctor says no on nerve damage, otherwise I would not be able to get an erection. What should I do?
A: You, too, should see a urologist (no I don’t get a kickback). Do not completely discount the back surgery as a factor just yet; the nerve pathways for erection and ejaculation are not completely identical.
But the much more likely culprit is the Paxil. Since the 1980s, doctors have known that anorgasmia can be a side effect of certain antidepressants. Sometimes they even prescribe them for guys who false-start. Seems the drugs gum up the serotonin cycle in the brain, which also happens to play a big role in climax. Antihypertensive and antipsychotic drugs, and alcohol, can also flash the red stop light.
Organic causes include spinal cord injury, nerve lesions, colorectal surgery, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson’s, diabetes and others.
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