A member asked:

How often should an adult man have an orgasm? if a man does not have orgasm, is he more prown to any type of cancer ?

4 doctors weighed in across 3 answers

There : There is no correct answer here. Research has had conflicting results. Whatever feels right for the individual is probably the right answer.

Answered 10/3/2016

5.4k views

Thank

Orgasms and Cancer: The bulk of the literature seems to point to the efficacy of "having a healthy history of orgasms" as a stress reducer and positive health effector for heart health and as a reduction in certain cancers, such as breast and prostate cancer. Most of the longitudinal studies followed subjects in the 20-40 year old age group. For women, the production of oxytocin during an orgasm noted.

Answered 1/27/2013

5.3k views

Thank

While orgasm is: The pleasure from sex, ejaculation is the fluid emission. Both are normal. Have too many or too few is not associated with cancer. Many men with prostate cancer needlessly worry that other than standard couplings re punishment. No evidence to support: vasectomy, boy;boy; boy:animal; excess masturbation or total abstinence either protect or increase risk of prostate cancer.

Answered 8/17/2013

5.3k views

Thank

Related Questions

A member asked:

Why don't I get tired after an orgasm like most men?

A doctor has provided 1 answer

A member asked:

What causes nausea after a man has an orgasm?

A doctor has provided 1 answer

A member asked:

Can a circumcised men experience full body orgasm?

A doctor has provided 1 answer