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Extreme PE May Lead to ED?

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  • Extreme PE May Lead to ED?

    I was wondering if the intense squeezing, hanging, and pulling we do to our penises may eventually lead to ED down the road? Since it's fairly new, and no one has documented their long-term state of their penis when they have been participating in PE for over 15+ years, so how do we know that we may not be hurting our guy in the long run? I'm not trying to worry you all, but can't these exercises contribute to the hardening of corpora cavernosa, weakening of veins, and even the numbing of nerves which all contribute to ED. I recovered from an injury due to taking on a routine that was too far advanced for me and suffered from a period of ED. It was a traumatizing experience, and I'm worried about becoming permanently trapped in that situation due to PE exercises.

    -Thanks

  • #2
    Sure it could. It's a risk you either take, or don't. Not everyone is in the same situation though, for me I had issues to begin with starting out below average in size and a chronic masturbator from porn abuse. It was a risk I was personally wiling to take considering I couldn't really be any worse off. Had nothing but mainly positives since. Follow directions, watch your pi's, don't over train and there shouldn't be a problem.

    If its causing you problems you can always stop, and you should if it is.

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    • #3
      Yes there is always that chance. In the absence of formal long-term clinical trials, nothing is completely certain. However, what I find interesting is that very few people question prescription medications and their long-term impact on the body (FDA approval only requires modeling of long-term effects). So anything that hasn't been around for 50+ years in wide-spread use is also risky, weather people know that or not.

      At least with PE there's no large pharma trying to convince you that their product is perfectly safe. It's just us on this forum and a great deal of trial-and-error.

      There is some literature on mechanical stresses to collagenous fibers over long periods of strain/stress. There is a risk of fibrosis from continual strain (some guys notice this as a firming of the interior of the corpus callosum when flaccid). There is also the risk of venous issues such as thrombosis. And there are the injuries caused by a momentary lapse of judgement while doing PE. But overall, I think if you're responsible, and serious about not going overboard, the risk seems low of any type of permanent injury. Standard precautions apply - if you have pre-existing conditions (diabetes, ED, overweight, any circulation issues) or are taking certain substances (blood-thinning medicines, heavy alcohol or substance abuse, etc) then you should think twice about PE before starting a routine.
      - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
      DATE- JAN FEB MAR APR MAY JUN JUL
      BPFSL 5.5 5.8 OFF 5.8 6.0 OFF 6.0
      BPEL- --- --- --- 6.1 6.3 --- 6.1
      MSEG- 5.4 --- --- 5.4 --- --- ---

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