Premature ejaculation can affect men of any age; and sometimes, it does get better and impacts men less over time. In this video, urologist Harry Fisch, MD, discusses how premature ejaculation tends to impact men over long periods of time.
You know it's interesting. Premature ejaculation occurs at all ages, and sometimes I find that men as they get older all of a sudden have a premature ejaculation. It's funny. In some men who have erectile dysfunction, so nervous that they're going to lose their erection, is that they try to ejaculate quickly.
So premature ejaculation can occur at all ages and something to worry about not just if you're 17, but if you're in your 50's, 60's and 70's. Premature ejaculation is something that could occur at different ages. It could occur when you're a teenager or when you're older, but whatever it is, premature ejaculation can sometimes get better on its own and it's not clear why.
It may be how excited you get during sex or things that you're visually stimulated by, but in general, premature ejaculation can get better by itself.
Harry Fisch, MD is a board certified urologist at New York Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Medical College of Cornell University. He is a national leader in the diagnosis and treatment of men's health issues, as well as sexuality and fertility
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