Does your doctor even know about the need for sex post stroke?
All this is why you need to be doing lots of sex, why the hell can't your doctor get you fucking again?
Sexual Frequency Predicts Greater Well-Being, But More is Not Always Better
Sex after stroke
Sex linked to better brain power in older age
Sex: The Ultimate Full Body Workout
Better Memory From This Extremely Pleasurable Activity - Sex
WHY SEX IS BETTER FOR YOUR BRAIN THAN SUDOKU
Sex linked to better brain power in older age
Good News About Sex- It Doesn't Cause a Stroke
Sex Does Not Increase Heart Attack Risk - What about stroke?
Frequent orgasms may protect against heart attacks
An orgasm a day keeps the doctor away!
In case you don't have a partner she could prescribe this.
Electrosex
And the benefits of marijuana for sex here:
Sex, Marijuana and Baby Booms
The latest here:
Can not having sex be harmful to your health?
John Murphy, MDLinx|February 10, 2020
Sex
has a lot of physical and mental health benefits. It can reduce stress,
bolster immunity, improve sleep, and even provide a bit of healthy
exercise.
Can going without sex harm your health?
But,
is the opposite true? Can going without sex—whether voluntarily or
involuntarily—harm your health? (That’s almost literally adding insult
to injury—or rather, injury to insult.)
Let’s look into some of these questions. Does lack of sex...
Increase anxiety?
Sexual activity releases hormones and endorphins that elevate mood, release tension, and increase feelings of satisfaction and pleasure.
Having
a sexual “dry spell” can deprive some individuals of those stress
relievers. Worse yet, going without sex can itself create or worsen
feelings of anxiety and stress.
Cause physical pain?
Colloquially
known as “blue balls,” this colorful term refers to scrotal pain from
sustained sexual arousal unrelieved by orgasm and ejaculation. The pain
may range from brief, mild discomfort to severe, sustained pain.
Despite
the likely prevalence of this condition in the population, “blue balls”
(medically known as epididymal hypertension) is nearly absent from the
literature, noted the authors of a case study
involving a 14-year-old male. These authors speculated that the
condition starts with sexual arousal, which produces pelvic venous
dilatation. When this persists and testicular venous drainage is halted,
the pressure builds (probably in the epididymis), which in turn causes
pain.
The term’s use of the color blue likely
refers to feeling as though the testicles are bruised (since they don’t
actually change color), Abraham Morgentaler, MD, director, Men's Health
Boston and associate clinical professor of urology, Harvard Medical
School, Boston, MA, told Buzzfeed.
The
simple therapy for the problem is ejaculation, through either
masturbation or intercourse. Or, “perhaps straining to move a very heavy
object—in essence doing a Valsalva maneuver,” the case study authors
suggested. If neither of those solutions is readily available or easily
accomplished, wait an hour or so and it will probably go away on its
own.
Worsen immunity?
Researchers have shown
that people who have sex once or twice per week have higher levels of
salivary immunoglobulin A—an antibody that’s the body’s first line of
defense in protecting vulnerable mucosal surfaces (eg, oral cavity,
lungs, and gut) from invading pathogens.
But, people who have sex less frequently than once or twice a week—as well as those who have sex more frequently
(three or more times per week)—have lower levels of the antibody,
leaving them perhaps a little more vulnerable to illness.
So, if you’re looking to improve your immune system through sex, the sweet spot is one to two times per week.
Increase prostate cancer risk?
Frequent ejaculation may prevent prostate cancer, researchers have found.
Specifically, men who ejaculated 21 or more times a month had a 33%
lower risk of prostate cancer compared with men who reported 4 to 7
ejaculations a month.
Researchers
believe that carcinogenic secretions likely accumulate in the
prostate—a situation that increases the opportunity for prostate cancer
to develop. But ejaculation sweeps out these carcinogens. The more
frequently that ejaculations occur, the fewer carcinogens remain behind
to cause cancer.
So, based on this research,
it appears that having ejaculations in the single digits each month may
put men at a greater risk for prostate cancer.
Disturb sleep?
The act of sex lowers stress-related hormones like cortisol and boosts happy hormones like oxytocin and prolactin,
which make you feel relaxed and sleepy. All of this contributes to a
contentful, drowsy state that’s perfect for snuggling up and sleeping.
As noted above, the lack of sex can induce its own stressors, which are not conducive to a restful night’s sleep.
Bottom line
Sex
is generally a healthy activity for most people. But not every time,
and not for everyone. In some cases and for some people, it’s healthier
to forgo sexual activity.
Absolutely nothing here for or about women. Useless.
ReplyDeleteThis is why we need survivors in charge, we wouldn't skip half the planet.
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