Research Summaries
Upcoming Events
- Sexual Health Topics: Men’s Sexual Health, Women’s Sexual Health, Medications & Sexual Health, Sexual Orientation & LGBTQIA+ Health
Substance-Linked Sex in Heterosexual, Homosexual, and Bisexual Men and Women: An Online, Cross-Sectional “Global Drug Survey” Report
Will Lawn PhD, Alexandra Aldridge MPhil, Richard Xia BS, Adam R. Winstock MD
FIRST PUBLISHED: April 2, 2019 – The Journal of Sexual Medicine
- Sexual Health Topics: Men’s Sexual Health, Sexual Health Management & Treatments
Scrotoplasty at Time of Penile Implant is at High Risk for Dehiscence in Diabetics
Nikhil K. Gupta MD; Randy Sulaver MD; Charles Welliver MD; Michael Kottwitz MD; Luke Frederick MD; Danuta Dynda MD; Tobias S. Köhler, MD
FIRST PUBLISHED: March 6, 2019 – The Journal of Sexual Medicine
- Sexual Health Topics: Men’s Sexual Health, Sexual Health Management & Treatments
Comparative Effectiveness of Intralesional Therapy for Peyronie’s Disease in Controlled Clinical Studies: A Systematic Review and Network Meta-Analysis
Giorgio Ivan Russo, MD, PhD; Giovanni Cacciamani, MD; Andrea Cocci, MD; Thomas M. Kessler, MD; Giuseppe Morgia, MD; Ege Can Serefoglu, MD, FECSM; Maarten Albersen, MD, PhD; Paolo Verze, MD, PhD, on behalf of EAU-YAU Men’s Health Working Group
FIRST PUBLISHED: January 25, 2019 – The Journal of Sexual Medicine
- Sexual Health Topics: Men’s Sexual Health
Many men feel anxious and distressed about their penis size and seek medical procedures to increase it. Most men in this situation already have a normal-sized penis (The average length of an erect penis is 13.1 centimeters; the average girth is 11.65 centimeters.)
- Sexual Health Topics: Men’s Sexual Health, Sexual Health Management & Treatments
Penile Prosthesis Reservoir Removal: Surgical Description and Patient Outcomes
Jonathan Clavell-Hernández, MD; Samuel G. Aly, MD; Run Wang, MD; Hossein Sadeghi-Nejad, MD
FIRST PUBLISHED: December 12, 2018 – The Journal of Sexual Medicine
The first of the two recent studies reporting risks with testosterone prescriptions, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association by Vigen et al (1), was a retrospective analysis of a dataset of 8709 men in the VA health system who had undergone coronary angiography. Among men with testosterone concentrations less than 300ng/dl, the authors reported an increased rate of heart attacks, strokes, and deaths in men who received a testosterone prescription compared with men who did not.