Post Prostate Cancer Surgery And Sex – What Most People Don’t Know
November 15, 2011 by ProstateCancerVictory
Filed under Prostate Cancer and Sex
Prostate cancer: the words alone stir up some awe and fear in many men in the United States; women are not much spared either – they are the ones who have to pick up the pieces if the man dies, or live with him in the aftermath if he does not. A confirmation of the diagnosis of this disease alone is an inexorably life changing and earth shattering reality that precursors at least a few moments of depression and compensation, if not an entire lifetime.
Complicating matters is the fact that most of the prostate cancer treatments that there are have side effects and contraindications that few people if any are proud to have to live with. Take the Prostate Cancer Surgery for instance; during the procedure the entire prostate gland is more or less inevitably removed in order to take out the tumor growing within it entirely. This organ produces the most part of the fluid in semen, so that without much ado, there is a foreboding understanding that the man may never again produce semen; thus leading to impotency in many cases.
Life and sex post prostate cancer surgery is a case study, but one that is not difficult to deal with considering the number of people who are diagnosed with the disease annually. More than two hundred thousand men get the ill news each year, and immediately they know that if they are going for the radical prostatectomy, they might never again be able to have sex – at least not in the good old way.
Besides the loss of continence that results from the procedure, all men who have undergone a prostate cancer surgery have to deal with impotence… at least for a while if things turn out rather well, which they are not likely to. The nerves that control erection are so close to the prostate gland that operating on the organ will harm them in some way, so that man may not be able to achieve and erection again.
Some men over the course of time recover some degree of potency, but it is often nowhere near what they used to have; for the most part, many men report that they have to do it with the aid of Viagra or Levitra, or some other such drug that helps to deal with impotence. Other men say it’s the penile injection for them; and some say it’s the vacuum penis enlargement pumps.
Considering the fact that penile sensation, libido, and the ability to achieve an orgasm generally remain intact after a prostatectomy, it is understood how erectile dysfunction can be tortuous for a man. Realizing that he might never again have any ejaculate after sex might be tumultuous for a man’s mind. But consider this: virtually millions of American men live with this even this moment… and they still find some purpose in life, even in the absence of sex the good old way.
Post Prostate Cancer Surgery Orgasms – Orgasming After Prostatectomy
November 8, 2011 by ProstateCancerVictory
Filed under Prostate Cancer and Sex
It is a bleak thought for most people when they consider life after prostatectomy. No longer much of a secret at this time, most men in the United States are fully aware that their sexual life is compromised by the surgical procedure to remove the prostate gland, during which the nerves that control erection are damaged in some way, most times irreparably. A concern that they generally have also is if they would ever again be able to father a child…
For the record, after a radical prostatectomy, the entire prostate is gone, meaning that no more prostate fluid is being produced. The prostate fluid is the substance produced by this organ which makes up most of the liquid part of the semen that is discharged during sexual orgasm. The sensory neurons in the region are still intact, as a matter of fact, so that penile sensation has not gone anywhere; contrary to certain popular beliefs, the ability to achieve an orgasm has not gone anywhere either. What has suffered is the ability to achieve an erection, and yes, painfully the ability to ejaculate. With the prostate fluid out of the way, there isn’t much to carry the sperm on their way out from the testicles – if the testicles are still in position and not removed for some form of hormonal therapy…
Post prostate cancer surgery orgasms, according to reports by those who have experienced it – and still are experiencing it – are some of the most intense experiences that a man may ever go through. The strength and concentration of the experience may fade with frequency after the first occurrence, but they generally seem to remain a lot more forceful than previous ones before the operation, if reports are to be believed.
Most men certainly desire the pleasure of the seeing the creamy white ejaculate springing out of the penis at the time that they orgasm, but that is not likely to be. There of course is the lubrication fluid from the cowper’s glands that generally comes before the act of sexual intercourse, and may in certain cases be sustained through to the end of the copulation, but it generally is nowhere near the quality of good old fashioned semen.
In order to achieve an erection in this phase of a man’s life, he may have to rely heavily on little blue pills Viagra, of Levitra, or Cialis. VED vacuum pumps also help a great deal, although they will have to be helped by a cord to band tied around the base of the penis to keep the blood from flowing back out. Otherwise, the man may go with the penile injections option to achieve a semblance of potency. But as for the ejaculate at orgasm, if it is prolonged or anything of that sort, it is likely just urine from the bladder.
Electric Stimulation For Impotence After Prostate Surgery
October 17, 2011 by ProstateCancerVictory
Filed under Prostate Cancer and Sex
One of the most debilitating side effects of prostate cancer treatment such as surgery is the loss of the ability to achieve an erection, which most patients suffer during the course of therapy. It is because of the proximity of the nerves that control erection in males to the prostate gland, being so close that it is hardly possibly to touch one without touching the other. Particularly in prostate cancer surgery, irreparable damage can be done to these nerves such that erection may become impossible.
Perhaps the most frustrating reality of it all is the fact that penile sensation and the ability to achieve orgasm remain intact and only ejaculation and erectile functions are impaired. To deal with this complication, various efforts are contemplated and attempted.
The use of Viagra, for instance, generally returns some semblance of potency; the use of VED vacuum pumps is gaining popularity even though a lot of people think it is a lot of trouble to expect one’s partner to have to deal with; and the use of injections into the side of the penis is a third option that a lot of men aren’t too excited about.
Electric stimulation for impotence after prostate surgery is a fourth effort that folks contemplate as a remedy after damage done to the blood vessels and nerves controlling erection after a radical prostatectomy. It is however done mostly in the process of the surgery as part of a nerve sparring procedure, more than as an effort used in the treatment of correction of the problem once it has occurred.
For prostatectomy nerve-sparing surgery, the surgeon applies a mild electrical stimulation near the Cavernous nerves of the penis to verify their locations and avoid operative trauma. Damage to these elusive but critical nerves causes the erectile dysfunction outcomes that everyone is so concerned about.
By the time the procedure is complete (at the end of the radical prostatectomy), the electrical stimulation penile plethysmograph result is a prognostic element then, which helps to manage the erectile function outcomes earlier than the many months required for recovery.
Some vacuum pumps make use of electrical power and may sometimes be construed as electric stimulation for impotence after prostate surgery. However, according to one Dr. Karen Pape, two further different types of electric stimulation may be used to help rehabilitate the muscles of the penis in the wake of the damage done to its nerves by the surgery.
One of these procedures is threshold electrical stimulation (TES), and the other is neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES). The procedure is described online on her personal page, where her ebook may also be obtained.

