Asdf1234 wrote:Just had results of my latest T level and it’s 19.1 nl/mol which converts to 550.....I think is the higher end of normal?
Its right in the middle of normal range. Nothing wrong with your T level.
Asdf1234 wrote:Just had results of my latest T level and it’s 19.1 nl/mol which converts to 550.....I think is the higher end of normal?
Asdf1234 wrote: [...] I have a congenital curve but they think it possible that it has developed into the very start of Peyronies. Even though I have no palpable plaques or pain or anything. And the Doppler didn’t show anything. They told me once the MRI is done it will at least rule out anything physical and will help the psychological aspect. [...]
Simbarn wrote:I have just reread your entire thread. Could it be possible that you have a pelvic floor issue. Something similar to the condition called hard flaccid. It is interesting that since starting "high intensity exercise" you now have difficulty getting an erection even when lying down.
If your pelvic floor muscles were in an excessively contracted state before the above routine, this may have intensified.
As your nocturnal erections have been significantly affected and you are not waking with solid erections in the night or morning, I feel there is more than a psychological aspect to your problem.
At night the part of the brain that inhibits erections during the day shuts down, making erections during REM sleep much easier to occur. These are vital for penis health. Anxiety will during the day encourage that part of the brain to work overtime, but not while you sleep.
If your pelvic floor is in a constant spasm, nerves that supply the penis can become affected and possibly even the blood supply. If you have exhausted all other avenues, I would seriously consider the above and seek out a pelvic floor specialist. You can even try some stretch’s for the area yourself.
In my clinic we have a functional magnetic stimulation machine called the Tesla FMS. It has programs that can work the pelvic floor muscles if they are in a weak condition. Women can use this to correct incontinence and it also has programs for erectile dysfunction if it is caused by weak pelvic floor muscles, that is the opposite to what I have discussed above. I am mentioning this as the pelvic floor condition is more important than some realise. It is important that either form is diagnosed correctly.
As you have suffered from anxiety for some time, this can have a negative effect on various parts of the body. Muscle tensions can develop and persist. These spasms are the result of the sympathetic nervous system running on overdrive for long periods. As I mentioned to you in another post, the elements that maintain the penis in a flaccid state during the day; the adrenergic pathway can also become exacerbated during long periods of anxiety.
Essentially it becomes the new normal. This needs to be reset and the only way to do this is to treat the anxiety.
It is also possible that an “intense exercise routine” is not what you needed. Undertaking a gradual and moderate routine may have been more beneficial and not caused too much of a shock to your system. As your “fight or flight” response may be engaged most of the time in your body, it doesn’t need any more shocks!
Did you read the recent excellent post by a young doctor on this forum who eventually worked out that his ED was primarily caused by a pelvic floor issue? It may help you.
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