So can premature ejaculation be cured?

  When it comes to medical treatment, everyone wants a “cure” and premature ejaculation is no exception. So can premature ejaculation be cured? Will it come back after being cured? If there is a possibility of recurrence, under what circumstances will it recur? The actual fact is that you’ll be able to get a lot more than just a couple of days to get a lot more than just a couple of days. When it comes to whether premature ejaculation can be “cured”, first we need to understand what “cure” means. The term “radical” is a generic term that is rarely used by doctors, but is only used in a few tumor surgeries, such as “radical surgery for prostate cancer” and “radical surgery for breast cancer”. The term “radical cure” mostly refers to the removal of not only the symptoms but also the cause of the disease, and the recurrence of the same condition after the cure, or at least for a long time.  If you know what a root cause is, we can see if the treatment of premature ejaculation can be a root cause. First of all, from the point of view of etiology, usually premature ejaculation is divided into two categories, namely primary premature ejaculation and secondary premature ejaculation. The so-called secondary premature ejaculation, that is, premature ejaculation is caused by other diseases, commonly due to glans penis or urethral inflammation and so on. This is the first time I’ve ever seen a woman with a newborn baby. However, this kind of cause is like a cold, and it may happen again if you do not pay attention to hygiene, so it is not possible to talk about a “cure”.  In addition, most patients with premature ejaculation are primary premature ejaculation. The cause of primary premature ejaculation is difficult to explain, it is related to individual differences, the cooperation between the couple, environmental factors, moral and cultural pressures, and so on. These patients usually start to experience premature ejaculation when they first start having sex, or after changing sexual partners. Over time, a specific pattern of sexual behavior develops relative to that of the partner. When doctors deal with this type of premature ejaculation patients, they actually have to help the patient re-establish a pattern of sexual behavior that is satisfactory to the patient with the intervention of medication, behavior and other treatment modalities. Premature ejaculation will often no longer persist after treatment without changing sexual partners, and without a dramatic change in the circumstances of sexual life. However, it is well known that even in the most sexually competent men, the speed of ejaculation is not constant. In the case of a change of sexual partner, it is even more difficult to say whether the interaction between the new partner will change the behavior pattern of the patient. Therefore, this is hardly a “cure”.  In fact, premature ejaculation, prostatitis, erectile dysfunction, and many other conditions are generally not “cured” either. In the process of treating premature ejaculation, it is important not to overemphasize that it is not a “cure”, but to maintain a normal heart and confidence in curing the disease.