Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Postorgasmic illness syndrome (POIS) is a syndrome in which human males have chronic physical and cognitive symptoms following ejaculation. [1] The symptoms usually onset within seconds, minutes, or hours, and last for up to a week. [1] The cause and prevalence are unknown; [2] it is considered a rare disease. [3]
Injuries to the privates that affect the function of your privates may make it more difficult for you to get hard and stay hard in general, and some of them can also cause arousals to become painful.
Hard flaccid syndrome (HFS), also known as hard flaccid (HF), is a rare, chronic condition characterized by a flaccid penis that remains in a firm, semi-rigid state in the absence of sexual arousal. Patients describe their flaccid penises as being firm to the touch, rubbery, shrunken, and retracted.
Physical arousal caused by PGAD can be very intense and persist for extended periods, days, weeks or years at a time. [3] [4] Symptoms may include pressure, pain, vibrating, pleasure, irritation, clitoral or penile [5] tingling, throbbing, vaginal congestion, vaginal contractions, penile spasms, arousal, clitoral or penile erections, and prolonged spontaneous orgasms. [3]
For example, a study in 2011 found that adult men with ED and dyslipidemia (abnormal amounts of lipids in the blood) experienced improvements in erectile function after taking niacin for 12 weeks.
The key is not squeezing the head too hard; just firmly put pressure on the shaft of their penis with your thumb and forefinger. The squeezing can help delay ejaculation, so you two can keep at it ...
Odynorgasmia, or painful ejaculation, also referred to as dysejaculation, dysorgasmia, and orgasmalgia, [1] is a physical syndrome described by pain or burning sensation of the urethra or perineum during or following ejaculation.
If it’s hard to tell how close your partner is getting, just ask, Jean says. If you’re the receiver, don’t be afraid to sound the alarm that you’re getting close. Communicating—whether ...