Updated Jul 2, 2007 at 23:16 EST.
In Supplement 1 of September – October 2006 International Journal of Impotence Research B. Oliver et. al. discuss a model for human male sexual dysfunction discovered through studies with rats. According to the studies these researchers conducted, male rates will, over time, settle into a pattern of sexual function. Some of the rats will naturally ejaculate quickly while others are slower to ejaculate.
The inference made is that quicker rats could be assumed to ejaculate prematurely while those with slower rates have retarded ejaculation. Since the rats were “pre-clinical” or did not have a predisposition to either ejaculation rate at the beginning of the studies, researchers felt that a fairly stable model for male humans could be explored. Additional research could be performed to find out whether or not serotonin reuptake inhibitors help those rats with quicker ejaculation rates, much as it does in men with premature ejaculation rates.
Written by the PEhomepage.com Editorial Team.
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