In my
last column, I gave you the lowdown on some of the health benefits of
sexual expression for women. Now it’s the men’s turn.
Studying a large group of people over an extended period of time is the best
way to find out how changes in health are triggered by various lifestyle
modifications. Several such studies have found that sexual activity seems to
have a positive effect on men’s health. For example, a study in Great
Britain followed over 900 men (age 45 to 59) for 10 years. It turned out
that men who had experienced two or more orgasms per week had a 50 percent
lower mortality risk than those men who had orgasms less than once a month.
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Another study in North Carolina followed 252 men and women for 25 years to
see what factors were important in determining life span. The researchers
looked at a long list, including frequency, and past and present enjoyment,
of intercourse. They found that for the men in the study, the amount of
intercourse they were having predicted longevity almost as well as a crystal
ball. For women, past enjoyment of intercourse was the factor most
associated with longevity.
Finally, a Swedish study followed 166 men and 226 women (all were 70 years
old) for five years. Some of these individuals died before their 75th
birthday, and it was found that mortality was higher among men who had quit
having intercourse at earlier ages. Once again, the picture was a little
different for women, and no association between sexual intercourse and
mortality was found for females.
For men, the old saying seems to be true: Use it or lose it—including your
life. The risk of dying from a heart attack appears to be higher in men who
have intercourse less than once a month as compared to more sexually active
men. Let me add, though, that it is hard to say what comes first, the
chicken or the egg. Do men with healthier hearts have more sex, or does more
sex make men healthier?
But when looking at cancer rates, it seems clear that for men, sexual
activity is on par with eating broccoli. Two recent studies showed that
frequent ejaculation (either during intercourse or masturbation) reduces
prostate cancer rates. One Australian study asked over 2,000 men under the
age of 70 to recall how often they had orgasms in their 20s, 30s and 40s.
Men who had the experience four or more times per week had about a 30
percent lower risk of developing prostate cancer than men who did less than
three times per week.
Another survey of over 50,000 U.S. men (ages 40-75) also concluded that men
who ejaculated more often had a lesser risk of developing prostate cancer
than men who did so less often. Why this is true has yet to be discovered.
It is possible that having an orgasm clears the prostate from potential
carcinogenic substances. And the researchers speculate that hormones that
regulate sexual function could play a factor, or that the psychological
stress reduction of ejaculation is great for the body as well.
Let me finish by mentioning that the hormone oxytocin, which is released
during arousal and orgasm in both men and women, may prevent breast cancer.
A study of 23 Greek men with breast cancer found that fewer number of
orgasms were associated with higher risk of breast cancer. And the same
could be true for women. A French study of 51 women recently diagnosed with
breast cancer and 95 controls found that women who had either no sex partner
or only had intercourse less than once a month had a higher risk of breast
cancer.
03/25/2008-03/31/2008
Reprinted from C-Ville Weekly
www.C-VILLE.com
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