When
our penis hydraulics fail, we’ll swallow our pride and the magic pills, and if they fail,
we’ll vacuum pump it, tie it up with rubber bands, use a needle and syringe to
shoot drugs into it, and, if none of that works, we’ll have
the poor guy reamed out and stuffed with plastic tubes we can fill with salt
water for woodies on demand.
Now
some Israeli doctors have tried yet another technique: shocking the
poor thing. Using something they call “low-intensity extracorporeal shock wave
therapy,” a team from the Rambam Healthcare Campus in Haifa actually succeeded
in giving recalcitrant penises a boost.
A
year ago, they announced that a study using both tissue in culture dishes and
actual humanerectile dysfunction patients appeared to indicate that
applying shockwaves to the tissue sparked the growth of new blood vessels.
That’s important because erections are caused by blood rushing into the penile
vasculature. Often, as men age, we accumulate vasculature damage. Sometimes as
a result of diabetes or cardiovascular disease, the penile blood vessels
degrade. E.D. pills like Viagra boost blood flow into the penis to compensate.
Last
time, the team tested the idea on patients who responded to PD-5 inhibitors
like Viagra. This time, they selected patients, many with complicating diseases
like diabetes, who did not, or were no longer, responding to the pills.
In
each treatment session, men were given 300 shocks over a period of three
minutes, on five points along the shaft of the penis. There were two sessions
per week for three weeks, then three weeks off, and then another three-week
treatment period. The shocks were tiny, really, and the men didn’t complain of
any pain or discomfort.
The
goal was to see if the therapy would make the pills any more effective.
Two
months after the treatments concluded, erection scores — yes, erections get
scores just like Olympic divers — improved in 75 percent of the 29 men in the
study. Eight men, nearly 30 percent, had erections in the normal range when
they used an E.D. pill. Blood flow improved in all the men. That’s pretty
impressive considering seven of the men were already using the injections and
two of the men were considering a penile implant — a drastic last resort.
The
study authors stress that this was not a placebo-controlled trial of the
technique and they plan more tests. Still, it’s pretty big news if this shock
therapy really can spark new vessel growth. If so, shocking your boy may well
become standard. If, that is, our abused penises don’t rebel first.
- msnbc.com
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