Updated May 23, 2007 at 9:33 EST.
At the March 2007 conference of the European Association of Urology, N Hendolin, S. Aaltomaa and
E Alhava presented results from a survey of Finnish men used to determine the prevalence of premature ejaculation ( PE ) and erectile dysfunction in the Finnish male population. The study asked men to self-report premature ejaculation ( PE ). It was originally mailed to 2,500 men with a 36.8% response rate.
Researchers noted premature ejaculation
( PE ) 28.8% of men responding to the survey with men at older ages reporting more issues than younger men. In addition, researchers found that premature ejaculation ( PE ) existed in addition to erectile dysfunction in some men with acquired premature ejaculation ( PE )
(74.0%), lifelong premature ejaculation ( PE ) (58.9%), and occasional premature ejaculation ( PE ) (33.9%) vs. men who never reported difficulty (18.2%). One of the concerns expressed in the study is that men may not be able to adequately distinguish between premature ejaculation ( PE ) and erectile dysfunction. Since premature ejaculation ( PE ) is poorly defined, it could lead to some confusion with accurate self-diagnosis.
Written by the PEhomepage.com Editorial Team.
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