Science Evidence Mounts That Porn Doesn't Cause Erectile Dysfunction

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KEY POINTS​

  • Porn critics contend that watching pornography increases men's risk of erectile dysfunction (ED).
  • Three recent studies conclude that porn viewing has nothing to do with risk of erection problems.
  • When men suspect that porn might be harming their erections, three other reasons usually explain why: substances, upbringing, and time.
Porn critics contend that as men’s pornography viewing increases, so does their risk of erectile dysfunction (ED). The anti-porn site, YourBrainOnPorn, notes “a correlation between pornography consumption and erectile dysfunction that suggests causation.” That message has gone viral. On the Q&A site I publish, many anguished men have asked questions that go something like: “I self-pleasure to porn, then afterward, I can’t get it up. Porn has destroyed my erections. Help!”

Actually, three recent studies show strong evidence that porn does not cause ED. There are better explanations why some men have difficulty raising erections after viewing.

Three Studies Agree: Porn Does Not Cause ED​

In the first study, Bowling Green (Ohio) State University investigators analyzed porn watching and ED risk among a representative sample of 877 men, age 18 to 60. The researchers found “no evidence that mere pornography use is associated with changes in erection function. Sexually active men who consume pornography showed very high levels of erection function. ED was rare. Our findings run counter to the popular narrative suggesting that pornography is driving an epidemic of ED.”


In another study, Indiana University researchers interviewed 211 men to gauge their sexual frequency. Eighty-one—38 percent—were highly sexually active, reporting sexual frequencies some might call “hypersexual.” Then the researchers wired the men’s penises and showed them porn. They had no problem raising erections while viewing it.


In the final study, researchers at UCLA and Concordia University in Montreal asked 280 men (127 in relationships) to keep diaries of their porn viewing for several months. The men reported a broad range of porn watching, from very little to 25 hours per week. The researchers then surveyed their erection function. They found “no relationship between viewing sex films and erectile dysfunction.”

In addition, critics charge that viewing porn desensitizes men to depictions of conventional sex and pushes them to more “extreme” porn, for example, BDSM, group sex, and gangbangs. The researchers found no desensitization, and no trend toward viewing less conventional sex. The men who watched the most porn and the wildest porn had no difficulty becoming aroused by watching one lone couple doing it in the missionary position.


The Three Reasons Men Mistakenly Think Porn Causes ED​

If porn doesn’t cause ED, what does? When men have trouble raising erections after viewing, the real reasons usually involve alcohol, sex-negative upbringing, and/or the refractory period:

  • Alcohol and other drugs. Alcohol is the world’s leading cause of drug-related sexual impairment. As Shakespeare wrote in Macbeth, alcohol “provokes the desire, but takes away the performance.” The first drink is disinhibiting. Prospective lovers are easier to coax into bed. But if people of average weight drink more than two beers, cocktails, or glasses of wine in an hour or so, alcohol becomes a central nervous system depressant that interferes with erection in men (and sexual responsiveness in all genders). Meanwhile, many people lose their virginity while drunk, and then continue to mix booze and sex, including while self-sexing to porn. Try solo sex sober. You’ll probably experience much less difficulty raising erections—even if you watch lots of porn. Other drugs may also contribute to ED. Ask your doctor or pharmacist if any of the medications you take are among them.
  • Sex-negative upbringing. In the Bowling Green study, a small number of men reported both frequent porn watching and ED. Those men all had one thing in common. They’d been raised to believe that solo sex—especially to porn—is wrong, immoral, or sinful. Such beliefs often cause considerable emotional distress. That distress triggers the release of the stress hormone, cortisol. It narrows the penile arteries, reducing blood flow into the penis. Less blood in the penis means more trouble raising erections. When sex therapists reassure men raised in sex-negative homes or religions that virtually all men masturbate to porn, that it’s perfectly normal and won’t harm them, men with stress-related ED usually relax. Their penile blood flow returns to normal. And they recover their erection function—even as they continue to self-sex to porn.
  • Refractory period. With or without porn, after solo or partnered orgasm/ejaculation, men enter what sexologists call the “refractory period” (RP), a length of time during which they can’t raise erections. RPs vary with age. It may take teenage boys only a few minutes to raise subsequent erections. But as men grow older, RPs extend to several hours, and among men over 60, sometimes more than 12 hours. It’s neither masturbation nor porn that causes this, but the physiology of men’s normal sexual response cycle. Many men who mistakenly complain of porn-related erection loss try to get it up before their RPs have ended. Try this: After self-sexing to climax with or without porn, do it again every hour or so to learn how long it takes you to raise your next erection. That’s your RP. Don’t expect new erections until you’re past your RP. Repeat this exercise every few years. With age, RP increases, so it’s a good idea to recalibrate your expectations.

No doubt that misinformed anti-porn advocates will continue to allege that porn causes ED. But a robust and growing research literature agrees it doesn’t.
 
Sex-negative upbringing. In the Bowling Green study, a small number of men reported both frequent porn watching and ED. Those men all had one thing in common. They’d been raised to believe that solo sex—especially to porn—is wrong, immoral, or sinful. Such beliefs often cause considerable emotional distress. That distress triggers the release of the stress hormone, cortisol.
There’s nothing wrong with porn goy, it’s your sense of morality that’s the problem.
 
I like how they frame this as some "gotcha! because this thing is not true (at first glance) porn is good bigot" while not hammering home the other ill effects of porn (Unrealistic expectations of relationships, Human trafficking in production etc. you know the speel)
 
I've always found the claim that watching porn causes ED curious. Isn't the idea behind exercise that if you repeatedly keep doing something like lifting weights, etc, the muscles get stronger? Then why wouldn't jacking off to porn all the time make your erections stronger? I can get the argument that perhaps you would get desensitized to real people and have trouble getting it up to those, but I would consider that more a "you're not banging hot enough people to get your dick hard" problem, not ED.
 
Watching porn won't give you ed, but whacking your dick raw everyday for hours on end to porn while laying in a heap of your own fluids and filth will.
 
I've always found the claim that watching porn causes ED curious. Isn't the idea behind exercise that if you repeatedly keep doing something like lifting weights, etc, the muscles get stronger? Then why wouldn't jacking off to porn all the time make your erections stronger?
The dick isn't a muscle, though. Maybe porn could cause a pavlovian response where the slightest visual stimuli would lead to an erection, but that's not any different than being thirteen again.
 
Sex-negative upbringing.
I hate this term. Teaching your kids self-control and to not be a coomer does not mean you think sex is bad. This is a clever false dichotomy.

Psychology is the abode of sex pests.
 
I've always found the claim that watching porn causes ED curious. Isn't the idea behind exercise that if you repeatedly keep doing something like lifting weights, etc, the muscles get stronger? Then why wouldn't jacking off to porn all the time make your erections stronger? I can get the argument that perhaps you would get desensitized to real people and have trouble getting it up to those, but I would consider that more a "you're not banging hot enough people to get your dick hard" problem, not ED.
Desensitization of the reward pathways is the problem. It's the same as anything else addictive, whether it be drugs, gambling, or sex. The more often you flood your brain with dopamine, the less sensitive those pathways become, and you end up chasing the dragon. Porn gives you a dopamine rush because it makes your lizard brain think you're having/about to have sex.

The problem with these studies is that they slew a strawman. Nobody ever said that if you watch porn you'll get ED in seven days like The Ring for your dick. It takes years of burning out those dopamine receptors on the regular to make that happen, and once it does it takes a very, very long time to fix it, if it's even possible. Of course they didn't find any correlation between porn and ED. They exclusively interviewed guys who jack off a lot. If your dick is broken, you're not jacking off.
 
Remember those old “Internet is for porn” memes from the 2000s, and they were silly? Now we have studies for dudes who cannot get it up because they’ve beaten their dicks to the point of impotent submission. Would rather there be less studies conducted on porn itself, but the individuals that succumb to it to the point where it becomes necessity.
 
Paraphilia? Like why young girls wants to become gay men and men wants to become women?
Paraphilia is just another word for fetish, isn't it?

Then again, "fetish" also refers to obsessions, and stuff used by medicine men to do shamanic stuff.
 
I've always found the claim that watching porn causes ED curious. Isn't the idea behind exercise that if you repeatedly keep doing something like lifting weights, etc, the muscles get stronger? Then why wouldn't jacking off to porn all the time make your erections stronger? I can get the argument that perhaps you would get desensitized to real people and have trouble getting it up to those, but I would consider that more a "you're not banging hot enough people to get your dick hard" problem, not ED.
The dick isn't really a muscle in the sense that your triceps are. It's filed with sort of a spongy erectile tissue that hardens when aroused.

The real issue is that porn leads to fucking up your dopamine receptors so that you need more and more novel (read: extreme) content to feel aroused.
 
The dick isn't really a muscle in the sense that your triceps are. It's filed with sort of a spongy erectile tissue that hardens when aroused.
Funny story: until my Mom corrected me, I thought that tenderloin was just peenor. I thought that pigs and cows had massive peenors. My Mom had to tell me that tenderloin is actually the meat around the shoulders, which goes unused in quadrupeds.
 
Kind of right ED is part lowering hormones + you problem. I see people say "Porn has made it so I can't find anyone IRL attractive anymore!" which just seems like a massive cope for your own fucked up standards. Its a cause and effect issue. Men with self image issues and warped views of reality seek out fantasy (porn) to get off which gives them what they want causing a spiral. In this sense porn abuse is still bad ofc but the cause and effect relationship is important. I recommend this essay :
But the point it makes is clear: Ron has an ideal woman image in his head, and only porn can give it to him. Real women don't measure up. We can debate the impact on women, that it forces women into gender specific stereotypes and presents women with impossible expectations of their sexuality and availability. Or something.

But feminists and Ron are reading this the wrong way. Porn is not causing him to be disconnected from women, he is already disconnected from them, and the only person that will have him is online. He's not retreating into porn because real women don't measure up, he's retreating into it because he doesn't measure up. He's not porn material. He doesn't expect or want that women will naturally act like porn stars in bed, he expects that he will be able to turn them into porn stars in bed, with his massive dong packing her into a creaming pliancy. It is his failure to be able to do this that drives him back to porn.

Add to that his own self-image. When you masturbate to porn, as with all fetishes, you are able to focus on a single piece of something as a proxy for all sexuality. It is super easy to look down at, say, your own penis manipulated to its max and see it as gigantic, see it as a proxy for the stud that you imagine you could be given the right script, lighting and production. But the moment the director yells, "action!" the self-consciousness kicks in. You see your flabby gut through her eyes and imagine she can't possibly be aroused by it. You don't feel sexy, so you are not interested in sex. Do I need to point out that this is what women used to say about themselves? Dude, you're acting like a girl.
 
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