Actually, if you look a little deeper you will find that SSRIs have a pretty shitty efficacy for treating PE. And SSRIs are basically the ONLY approved treatment for PE.
Can he use his hands? If so, yes. If not, dunno.
If he enjoys whistling through the wheat field, I’m all good with a short and sweet finish on his end, so yeah, I’m in.
Is that like yodeling down the canyon?
In this blind randomized study of 3 different SSRI’s 100 percent of the participants had a decrease in premature ejaculation symptoms after 4 weeks:
When I was prescribed antidepressants (for depression/anxiety), not only did it prolong it, sometimes made it impossible, and even caused the erection to have a weird spongy consistency, and yeah- it wasn’t good. My GF at the time, who wanted me to take the meds, was pretty much offended by the non-ejaculation.
What’s the second one for, the scrotum?
treatment for anti depression involves a higher dosage than the treatment for premature ejaculation and yes inability to orgasm is a common problem. When treating for premature ejaculation a lower dosage is used which in theory should make it take longer, but not impossible to finish.
Probably not. I’m a lesbian.
“Decrease in premature ejaculation” does not equal satisfactory decrease in ejaculation. Yes, SSRIs DO cause a delay in ejaculation. Of that there is no dispute. The question is how well do they work for men who suffer from premature ejaculation.
Also, I’d have to say that there are several different causes for PE and SSRI therapy is an effective treatment for some of these causes. For others, it is not.
That’s what cock rings are for.
In the study I linked 100 percent of participants achieved a significant decrease in symptoms. If you have a study indicating otherwise please provide a link, I can’t find one.
While they might not work for everyone to say they have “shitty efficiency” is definitely not true.
Heres another study in which a total of 78 percent of men had “very much improved” or “much improved” results:
http://www.nature.com/ijir/journal/v14/n6/full/3900918a.html
Ok, I should have said SSRIs are a poor overall treatment for PE due to the relatively high level of side effects that accompany the benefit. On top of that, they don’t work for some forms of PE.
If you’ve got a study to cite that then please link it. Both the studies I have linked showed only mild side effects. Overall SSRI’s are highly effective treatments for the majority of people with PE.
From your second link:
As this summary points out, all that has been shown was a possible effective treatment, in a small sample study. Hardly the evidence needed to be able to make statements like the one you made above.
And I’ll dig for info when I get a chance. But I’ll be back.
They call it ‘double bagging.’ [heh] I looked it up because the mechanics of why this would be doesn’t make sense to me. It still doesn’t. No double bagging seems to be the common wisdom on the subject, but there isn’t good scientific evidence to back it up. Still, most of the medical community seems to be in agreement that it’s not a good practice.
The first study I linked had 100 participants, more than enough to statistically significant.
Heres another study with 77 participants :
http://www.bioline.org.br/pdf?rm10010
Quote:
“Our findings indicate that fluoxetine and citalopram efficacies on PE are highly effective”
I’ve been a premature ejaculator roughly until 26 yo or so.
No amount of masturbation would solve the issue. If I could get it up, then I would ejaculate in no time during intercourse (but not when masturbating).
Not willing to share the details of my early sex life, but roughly, it solved itself very quickly (like in 2 months) once I found a partner who didn’t restrict pussy access. Once I had this unlimited access, I stoped ejaculating as soon as I came anywhere near said pussy.
First let’s run the combine through so we can more accurately assess the lay of the land.