Health Steward Q&A Men’s Health Erectile Dysfunction Solutions

Is it good to treat sexual dysfunction in half a year?

Asked by:Breeze

Asked on:Apr 16, 2026 01:09 AM

Answers:1 Views:482
  • Tide Tide

    Apr 16, 2026

    No one can give you a guarantee on this issue. I have been in the andrology clinic for almost 8 years. I have seen young men who returned to normal life after 2 months of treatment, and I have also seen middle-aged patients who had good and bad days after almost two years of treatment. Whether they can recover in half a year never depends on time. It depends on the root cause of your problem, whether you use the right method, and whether you can persist in following the doctor's instructions.

    For example, the 28-year-old guy who came for a follow-up visit last month works as an Internet operator. He has only slept 4 or 5 hours a day while working on projects for more than half a year. He has been sitting for so long that his prostate is a little swollen. In addition, he has just gotten married and his wife is not getting along well. He has a psychological shadow after the failure of having sex for the first time. Either he cannot get hard or he ejaculates within a minute after entering the room. When he comes in, he is completely numb. Six hormone tests and penile blood flow Doppler showed no problem. It was a typical functional disorder plus psychological anxiety. Later, I prescribed some mild conditioning medicine for him and asked him to run for half an hour every day. He must go to bed before 11 o'clock. I also taught him to do sexy concentration training with his wife. He also has strong execution ability. He has never had a sip of wine and rarely stays up late playing games. I will check again after 4 and a half months. He said that he can maintain it stably for more than 10 minutes. Last week, he specially sent me a message to say that my wife was pregnant. For people like this who have no organic damage, are young and have good metabolism, and are willing to cooperate, there are really many people who can recover in three or four months, not to mention half a year.

    But don’t think that everyone can be so smooth. Last year, a 47-year-old business executive came to me. He has been suffering from diabetes for 12 years and has been too lazy to control his sugar. He only took antihypertensive drugs when he thought about it. He had erectile dysfunction for almost three years before he thought about investigating it. When he was investigated, he already had mild atherosclerosis, and the blood supply to his penis was already lower than normal. He also always said that he was busy with work, often socializing and drinking, and sometimes forgot to take anti-diabetic medicine. It has been almost 9 months since he was recuperated, and he is still much better than before. He can have sex, but he cannot return to the state he was in when he was young. For those who have long-term underlying diseases, have already experienced organic damage, or who do not cooperate with the treatment, let alone half a year, one or two years may not achieve the "completely good" effect you want.

    There are also many people who are too proud to come to regular hospitals and secretly buy the so-called "quick-acting aphrodisiac" Sanwu products online. They are indeed effective at the time, but over time they destroy their own functions. It was just a small problem at first, but it became difficult to treat. It was supposed to be cured in three or four months, but it took more than half a year to get better. I have also seen many people. To put it bluntly, it's just like if your car breaks down, it just runs out of oil and you can run with some oil. If the engine is worn out and you add low-quality gasoline indiscriminately, it won't take long to repair it.

    In fact, there is really no need to worry about the dead line of "can it be cured in half a year?". First go to a regular hospital to find out whether it is a psychological problem, a problem with living habits, or a basic disease or organic injury. Find the right direction and persist. Most people can slowly improve. It is much better than guessing and trying medicine on your own.

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