Time Under Pressure and Oxygenation
Was just reading around on various forums, and I found a link to a study from 2014 detailing a controlled vacuum pumping experiment regarding oxygenation. While there are tons of opinions afloat concerning what is the maximally beneficial time under pressure, after searching Thunders I found no links to this study and wasn’t able to explicitly find any posts that had specifically related the method used for this study, which was found to have produced some good results re: oxygenation.
In their study, a number of men experiencing erectile problems after having recently undergone prostatectomy (partial or total removal of the prostate) were instructed to use a vacuum device, cycling the vacuum to induce ten erections within the span of approximately two minutes. Measurements of penile oxygen saturation throughout the penis were found to be on average 55% higher after this method.
The study is called:
"A pilot study to determine penile oxygen saturation before and after vacuum therapy in patients with erectile dysfunction after radical prostatectomy."
Link:
https://www.ncb … pubmed/24506138
There are lots of anecdotes abound suggesting that something like this cyclical approach is a good method to avoid a hypoxic (oxygen starved) condition, with some members of the forums employing much higher pressures than are generally recommended, but likewise for very limited duration.
Still, I thought it would be useful to ease the access to the scientific opinion on this subject, as well as lend some more emphasis for those casually perusing these forums on **limited or cyclical durations under stress and pressure**.
I believe that in my earlier (even) stupider years with PE, I, like many, was enthusiastic to the point of catastrophic hubris, clamping a little too long, and overall taking duration under stress WAY overboard. I did some tissue damage that it seems I was mostly able to reverse and I think adding to the cautionary voices on this site is always gonna be a good thing.
Beyond that, I’m interested to hear of any more concrete scholarly research that might specifically speak to oxygenation as relating to these vacuum durations.
A related study that I’m fond of sharing, this other NCBI study relates further evidence that while 10 minutes increased tissue VEGF levels, 30 minutes under stress (in this case from a penile tourniquette or a clamp) actually DECREASED VEGF levels below the control group, which had no tourniquette! VEGF being vascular endothelial growth factor.
This should accentuate, especially for newer members that these tissues don’t respond to stresses in a linear way, and are quite volatile regarding the fine details of the stresses they are put under.
"Effect of penile tourniquet on growth factors in rat penile tissue."
Link: Effect of penile tourniquet on growth factors in rat penile tissue
At any rate, if anybody’s got access to more scholarly data on the relationships between tissue oxygenation or VEGF levels and pumping pressures/durations/etc I’d love to see them!
Thanks, all.