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What to expect
Many sexual problems that men have after cancer treatment will
not
last long. For instance, pain with erection or ejaculation soon after
pelvic surgery or radiation is likely to go away. The stress of
treatment can also reduce hormone levels for a few weeks. This may
cause decreased desire or erection problems until hormone levels go
back to normal.
As you feel more in control of your body and your life, you
will
find that your self-confidence returns and your sex life often gets
better.
But some cancer treatments can cause a lifelong change in a
man's
sexual function. It's hard to know what will happen to any one person.
For example, one man's erections may come back after radical
prostatectomy while another man's may not. But if you do have a sexual
problem, your health care team can often find the cause and give you an
idea of your chance for recovery.
One clue that a problem is a medical one and permanent is if
it
happens in all situations. Otherwise, it may be psychological and short
term. For example, if you have trouble getting or keeping an erection,
does it happen every time you have sex? Are your erections better when
you relax, when you stimulate your own penis, or when you unexpectedly
see someone attractive? If you have a few partners, are your erections
better with one of them than with the others?
Dealing with short-term problems
As men age or go through health problems, feelings of sexual
excitement no longer lead to an instant erection. You may just need
more time and stroking to get aroused.
If you have trouble reaching orgasm during sex, perhaps you
have not
found the right kind of caressing. You might even think about buying a
hand-held electric vibrator. A vibrator can provide very intense
stimulation. Try having a sexual fantasy or looking at erotic stories
or pictures. The more excited you are, the easier it is to reach
orgasm.
A number of men have their first orgasm after cancer treatment
while
asleep, during a sexual dream. If this happens to you, it is proof that
you are physically able to have an orgasm. Because sleep erections
aren't affected by mood or state of mind, they give you an idea of the
best erection your body can produce. Now it is up to you to set things
in motion when you are awake.
Finding the cause of problems that appear to
be permanent
The best time to talk with your doctor or cancer team about
side
effects or long-term changes in your sex life is before treatment, so
that you can learn about the usual recovery and how long it takes. But
you can bring up the subject any time during and after treatment too.
Unless you have had surgery and are trying the "early rehabilitation"
approach, don't be surprised if you need several months to recover from
treatment. If erection problems last longer, talk with your doctor and
try different ways to overcome them. If your problem doesn't get
better, your doctor may ask you some questions about your sex life, and
then use special medical tests to help find the cause. You may need to
see more than one doctor to help you find out exactly what the problem
is and get the treatment you need.
Tests to measure nighttime erections
One of the tests used most often is done while you sleep. Your
doctor may send you for 2 or 3 nights to a sleep lab to check your
sleep erections. A technician watches your brain waves and breathing
during the night to make sure that your sleep patterns are normal. At
the same time, elastic loops placed around the base and tip of your
penis are connected to a recorder. The recorder measures changes in the
size of your penis during the night. If your sleep erections are firm
and long-lasting, your problem may respond well to some sexual
counseling. If your sleep erections are poor or you don't have an
erection, you may need surgery or medical treatment to correct the
problem.
Since sleep lab testing costs a lot, most doctors use other
ways to
check sleep erections. Many send a man home with an electronic monitor
to wear on the penis at night. This can be a very good test. A less
accurate test is to use a plastic strip (or snap gauge). The patient
wears it around the shaft of the penis during sleep. An erection breaks
1 to 3 bands of plastic film on the gauge, depending on the firmness of
the erection. Another option is a strain gauge, a circular device
placed at the base and tip of the penis that stretches during erection.
It also measures the change that happens with erection.
Other medical tests
Other tests, done in a doctor's office, can measure blood flow
in
the penis. One such test uses a doppler ultrasound. The doctor passes a
hand held device over the penis, and reflected sound waves show the
speed and direction of blood flow. This type of test looks for a block
in circulation that could be causing the erection problem. Sometimes
the test includes injecting medicine into the shaft of the penis to
produce an erection. In that case, the ultrasound imaging test is done
on the erect penis. Tests of nerve sensitivity and reflexes in the
genital area are sometimes done, too. Blood tests are also commonly
done to check the levels of the 2 hormones most closely linked to men's
sexual function, testosterone and prolactin.
When is sexual counseling helpful?
Any sexual problem caused or worsened by anxiety can respond
to
counseling with a sex therapist. For men, problems caused by anxiety
can include:
- loss of sexual desire
- erection problems without a medical cause
- trouble reaching orgasm
- premature (early) ejaculation
When a medical problem limits a man's sexual function, sex
therapy
can still be helpful. But the goals may change. For example, instead of
expecting a man to regain full erections, the therapist may help him
and his partner learn to enjoy sexual caressing without erections. Sex
therapists may also be able to help you and your partner decide whether
to have medical or surgical treatments for erection problems. (See the
section, "Professional
help.")
Is there a pill that will cure sexual
problems?
In 1998 the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved a drug
called sildenafil citrate (Viagra®) to treat impotence. Since
then,
2 similar drugs have been approved, vardenafil (Levitra®) and
tadalafil (Cialis®). All of these drugs help a man get and keep
an
erection by causing more blood to flow to the penis. About half of men
with impotence due to medical (rather than psychological) problems are
helped to some extent by these drugs.
Studies suggest that problems due to nerve damage from
prostate
cancer treatment may not respond as well to these drugs as some other
physical causes of impotence. But recent research suggests that using
one of these drugs within 6 months of surgery, on a regular basis, does
improve the rate of spontaneous erections after nerve-sparing radical
prostatectomy. (See "Early sexual rehabilitation after surgery" under
"Effects
of Cancer Treatment on Male Sexuality.") Some men who
don't get a good enough result with one of these drugs may do better
when they use it along with the penile injection. (See "Penile
injections" below.)
Many drugs are known to interact with this group of drugs. For
example, nitrates (like nitroglycerin and other drugs used to treat
heart disease) may interact to cause very low blood pressure, a
complication that can be fatal. Be sure your doctor knows about all
medicines you take, even those you take rarely.
The most common side effects of these impotence drugs are
headache,
flushing (skin becomes red and feels warm), upset stomach, sensitivity
to light, and runny or stuffy nose. In rare cases, these drugs may
block blood flow to the optic nerve in the back of the eye. This could
lead to blindness. Men who have had this problem were more likely to
have been smokers or had problems with high blood pressure, diabetes,
or high levels of cholesterol or fat in their blood.
Other medicines to treat impotence are being studied. You
might want
to ask your doctor about any new medicines or treatments for erection
problems. We will describe some other methods next.
Is there a way to restore erections if the
nerves or blood supply of the penis has been damaged?
Blood supply: If
a blockage in the main artery that brings
blood to
the penis is causing an erection problem, surgery may help. The surgeon
can take an artery that usually supplies blood to the abdominal wall
and re-route it by connecting it to the tiny blood vessels inside the
penis. But results have been disappointing in men who have poor
circulation, diabetes, or other diseases of the arteries. Still, some
men may be helped if they have an injury that blocked the artery to the
penis, and are otherwise healthy.
Nerve supply: During
the first 3 to 12 months after radical
prostatectomy, most men will not be able to get an erection without
using medicines or other treatments. The effect of this operation on a
man's ability to get an erection is related to his age and whether
nerve-sparing surgery was done. Nearly all men who have a radical
prostatectomy should expect some decrease in their ability for a few
months after surgery. After a year or 2, most men have some return in
their ability to have an erection, but younger men may expect to retain
more of their ability. Some experts use treatments to improve erections
soon after surgery to find out if it speeds recovery and helps heal
minor short term damage to the nerves and blood supply. (See "Early
sexual rehabilitation after surgery" in the section, "Effects
of Cancer Treatment on Male Sexuality.")
After standard radical prostatectomy, between 65% and 90% of
men
will become impotent, depending on their age. But if the surgeon does
not remove or damage the nerves on either side of the prostate, the
impotence rate drops to between 25% and 30% for men under 60. The
impotence rate is higher for men over 70, even if nerves on both sides
are not damaged or removed. After surgery, there is no ejaculation of
semen. (See "Removal of prostate gland and seminal
vesicles can cause dry orgasm" in the section "Effects
of Cancer Treatment on Male Sexuality."). Even with a dry
orgasm, the sensation
should still be pleasurable.
New research is looking at transplanting nerves to restore
erections, but further research is needed to find out how well it will
work. (See "Damage to nerve bundles that allow blood flow to the penis"
in the section, "Effects
of Cancer Treatment on Male Sexuality.")
Though surgery to correct blood flow problems has been
disappointing
so far, 3 non-surgical treatments have become widely used: penile
injection therapy, urethral pellets, and vacuum devices. We will also
discuss surgical options, called implants.
Penile
injections
Many urologists (doctors who specialize in conditions and
diseases
of the genitals and urinary tract) teach men to inject their penises
with medicines that cause erections. The drug is injected into the side
of the shaft of the penis through a very small needle a few minutes
before starting sex. The combination of sexual excitement and medicine
helps to produce a firmer and longer-lasting erection.
Penile injections can have side effects. Because of this, the
first
injection is usually done in the doctor's office. A few men may get an
erection that will not go down. If this happens, the man needs to go to
an emergency room right away for treatment. Some men develop scarring
in the spongy tissue of the penis after repeated injections. Scarring
is often not noticed by the man, but in severe cases can make erections
permanently curved. The only way to treat severe scarring is by surgery
on the penis.
Urethral pellets
A way of delivering the same drug used for penile injections
is to
have a man use an applicator to insert a tiny pellet or suppository
into his urethra (urinary tube opening at the tip of the penis). As the
pellet melts, the drug is absorbed through the lining of the urethra
and enters the spongy tissue of the penis. The man must urinate before
putting in the pellet so that the urethral lining is moist. After the
pellet is put in, the penis must be massaged to help the pellet absorb.
Although this system may be more convenient than injections, it does
not always work as well and can lead to much the same kind of side
effects. Because the pellet may cause dizziness in some men, a test
dose in the doctor's office may be needed. It can also cause some
burning in the urethra. Bits of the pellet may also enter the partner
during sex and cause burning, itching, or other discomfort.
Vacuum constriction devices
Another treatment, the vacuum constriction device (VCD), is
less
risky but may interrupt lovemaking more than an injection does. A man
places a plastic cylinder over his penis and pumps out air to produce a
vacuum around the outside of the penis. The suction draws blood into
the inside of the penis, filling up the spongy tissue. When the penis
is firm, the man takes the pump off and slips a stretchy band onto the
base of his penis to help it stay erect. The band can be left on the
penis for up to half an hour. Some men use the pump before starting
sexual touching, but others find it works better after some foreplay
has produced a partial erection. The erection from a vacuum device is
usually firm, but may swivel at the base of the penis, which can limit
comfortable positions for intercourse. It may take some practice to
learn how to use a vacuum device properly. Although most vacuum devices
are prescribed by physicians, the FDA has approved some that are
available over the counter.
Vacuum devices, penile injection, and the urethral pellets
have a
success rate between 50% and 70%. When injections or a vacuum device is
suggested, some sexual counseling can help a couple discuss their
options and plan how to make the new treatment a comfortable part of
their sex life.
Penile prostheses or implants
Surgery to implant a prosthesis in the penis was the first
really
successful treatment for medical erection problems. Over the past 20
years, many of these operations have been done, and they still work
quite well to treat permanent erection problems. Several types of
prostheses are now in use.
Semi-rigid rods:
For the simplest type, 2 silicone rods are
placed
into the spongy tissue of the penis. The result is a penis that hangs
about 45 degrees from the body and always stays about 80% erect. Since
it is above the urethra, the prosthesis does not affect urination. Most
semi-rigid prostheses now are easily shaped. A thin metal core runs
through each rod. When you bend the penis up or down to conceal it
during non-sexual activities, it stays bent. With any of the semi-rigid
prostheses, a man can avoid an obvious bulge at his crotch by wearing
briefs made for athletics, with heavier than normal elastic in front.
Inflatable
3-part pump (multi-part pump): The inflatable
penile
prosthesis has 3 main parts, and it offers the choice of a soft or hard
penis. It is a pump system placed entirely inside a man's body. Two
tough inflatable silicone cylinders are placed inside the penis just as
the rods are in the semi-rigid implant. A balloon-shaped reservoir
(storage tank) that contains a mixture of salt water and x-ray dye is
tucked behind the groin muscles. A pump is placed inside the loose skin
of the scrotal sac. All the parts are connected with tubing.
Usually, the salt water stays in the reservoir, leaving the
cylinders in the penis empty. From the outside, the penis looks the
same as it normally does when not erect, except that it is always a
little fuller. When you are ready for sex, you stiffen the penis by
squeezing the pump under the skin of the scrotum several times. This
pumps the salt water into the cylinders and inflates the penis as blood
does in a natural erection. When you have finished sexual activity and
no longer want an erection, you press a release valve on the bottom of
the pump. The cylinders will deflate. The salt water then returns to
its reservoir and your penis becomes soft.
Inflatable
2-part pump: A simpler 2-piece inflatable
prosthesis is a
cross between the semi-rigid and multiple part types. It has 2
cylinders that connect to a combined pump-and-reservoir unit that is
placed in the scrotal sac. The 2-piece inflatable prosthesis cannot
produce as long or thick an erection as the newest multi-part
inflatable. When the penis is not inflated, it will be softer than with
a semi-rigid prosthesis, but not as soft or small as with a multi-part
inflatable.
Special things
to think about before choosing an implant: Men
in
poor health are advised to try the semi-rigid or 2-piece inflatable
types, since the surgery is minor and the risk of future problems is so
low. A man who has superficial bladder tumors that keep coming back may
need an inflatable prosthesis because the semi-rigid rods interfere
with cystoscopy
(a test that looks inside the bladder.) A man who is
physically active, either on the job or in his leisure time (jogging,
playing tennis, riding), may be more pleased with an inflatable type,
since it does not get in the way as much.
If you are seriously thinking about prosthesis surgery, you
might
read the chapters on medical and surgical treatments in the books
listed in the "Additional
resources" section. Implants carry some risk
of complications, such as infection. Also, the devices with more parts
are more prone to failure, which then requires a second surgery.
Learn as much as you can and ask your urologist questions
about
possible complications before making your decision. A man who is
married or in a committed relationship should include his partner in
any decision about implants. Your partner needs to understand the
procedure and to have a chance to discuss any fears or questions with
your surgeon. You must be realistic about what a prosthesis can and
cannot do for you. Any penile prosthesis is just a mechanical stiffener
for the penis. Having a penile implant cannot solve any other problems,
such as low sexual desire, lack of sensation on the skin of the penis,
or trouble reaching orgasm. It cannot transform a poor sexual
relationship into a great one.
A couple needs to talk openly before they have sex after
implant
surgery. You may need to experiment with different kinds of touching or
with different positions. Make sure you are truly excited before trying
to have intercourse, rather than starting sex just because your penis
is erect. Couples who have maintained mutual touching, even if an
erection problem prevented penetration, tend to adjust more easily to
the prosthesis.
Can testosterone restore sexual functioning?
In the rare case that a man has a hormone imbalance,
testosterone
may restore his desire and erections. But hormones are too often used
without careful thought. Most men have enough testosterone, even after
age 50 or 60. Taking extra hormones will not cure a sexual problem. In
fact, it can have serious side effects.
One big problem is that extra testosterone could cause
undetected
prostate cancer to grow and spread. Men who have had prostate cancer
should never take testosterone pills or shots, even if their own
hormone levels are low. Testosterone is most helpful as a short-term
way to restore sexual desire and erections in men who have damaged
testicles from large doses of radiation or chemo. But very few men
really need extra hormones.
What about herbs or natural cures for
erection problems?
Many supplements are sold over the counter as "natural" cures
for
erection problems. These herbs and supplements have not been proven to
help men regain erections. And in the past, many supplements have been
found to not contain the ingredients listed on their labels.
Another problem is that some of the supplements contain extra
ingredients that are not listed on their labels. Even though they are
sold as "natural supplements" to help erections, some have been found
to contain sildenafil (Viagra®) or a substance much like it in
the
same family of prescription drugs. As these are discovered by the FDA,
the pills are recalled, but usually not until after many men have taken
them. These supplements can be very risky because the contents are not
labeled correctly and the man doesn't know what he is getting. One
danger is that he may take other medicines that interact with the drug
in a harmful or even fatal way. Or he may take too much of a substance
that is said to be harmless and without side effects, not knowing what
to expect.
Is there a way to make orgasm as intense as
it used to be?
Some men treated for cancer notice that their orgasms become
weaker
or last a shorter time than before. Sometimes, a mildly weaker orgasm
is just part of normal aging. As men age, the muscle contractions at
climax are no longer as strong. More severe weakening of orgasm often
goes along with erection problems. In those cases, treating the
erection problem may not improve a man's orgasms. Men who have dry
orgasms after cancer treatment also say they sometimes have reduced
sensation.
Few medicines can make a man's climax stronger. Most of these
medicines have dangerous side effects or may stop working after a few
doses. Some common-sense advice is to make sure you are as excited as
possible during sex. Focus on your sensations of pleasure or on an
arousing fantasy and take a long time for foreplay. If you find
yourself getting close to orgasm, ask your partner to tease you a
little by slowing down the caresses. Let your excitement die down and
rebuild several times before you actually climax.
You can practice this teasing technique during your own
self-stimulation, too. When you feel your excitement is high, stop
touching your penis, even if you lose part of your erection. Then
caress yourself again, stopping and starting several times before you
ejaculate. Whether by yourself or with a partner, make sure your
erection is as full as can be before you use the strong, rhythmic
caresses that bring on your orgasm. Some men learn to ejaculate with a
soft penis. But many find they have stronger orgasms if they can delay
orgasm until their erection is as firm as possible.
Last Medical Review: 02/02/2009
Last Revised: 02/02/2009
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