Wise Anderson Protocol: Stanford Study- Sexual Dysfunction
We have been treating patients with the Wise-Anderson Protocol since the middle 1990’s, we made the first presentation of our work to the National Institute of Health (NIH) in 1999, and we began publishing results of patient experience in our protocol in the journal of urology starting in 2005. Here is the second of the studies we did in the journal of urology reporting the reduction of sexual symptoms in patients with chronic prostatitis/CPPS. Sexual Dysfunction in Men with Chronic Prostatitis/ Chronic Pelvic Pain Syndrome: Improvement After Trigger Point Release and Paradoxical Relaxation Training (2006) - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16952676 Purpose: Quantifying sexual dysfunction in men with chronic pelvic pain syndrome and assessed the effects of pelvic muscle trigger point release concomitant with paradoxical relaxation training. Results: 92% of men had sexual dysfunction, including ejaculatory pain in 56%, decreased libido in 66%, and erectile and ejaculatory dysfunction in 31%. After trigger point release/paradoxical relaxation training specific pelvic pain symptoms survey, sexual symptoms improved an average of 77% to 87% in responders. A 50% improvement. Conclusions: Sexual dysfunction is common in men with refractory chronic pelvic pain syndrome and it is uexpected in the mid fifth decade of life. Application of the trigger point release/paradoxical relaxation training protocol was associated with significant improvement in pelvic pain, urinary symptoms, libido, ejaculatory pain, and erectile and ejaculatory dysfunction. Learn More about the Wise-Anderson Protocol (formerly known as the Stanford Protocol) at: http://www.pelvicpainhelp.com/ Order "A Headache in the Pelvis" Here: http://amzn.to/1ALuzvk
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