More control. More confidence. Real solutions.
Premature ejaculation is the most common male sexual dysfunction — and the most undertreated. Effective medical options exist. The conversation is simpler than you think, and the results are real.
PE affects men differently. All of it deserves treatment.
Premature ejaculation isn't just a timing issue — it's a confidence issue, a relationship issue, and often a physiological one. Understanding how it shows up for you is the first step to fixing it.
Clinically, PE is defined as ejaculation occurring within approximately 1–2 minutes of penetration. But the definition that matters to patients is simpler: earlier than wanted, more consistently than acceptable.
The absence of any ability to delay — even when actively trying. This is the most distressing aspect for most men, and it's highly responsive to treatment.
Performance anxiety that starts before sexual activity begins. The anticipation of PE causes tension that often makes PE more likely — a cycle that compounds over time.
Withdrawing from sexual situations to avoid the experience of PE. A protective behavior that creates distance in relationships and increases overall stress around sex.
PE rarely stays a private issue. Partners notice, and the silence around it often creates more distance than the issue itself. Treating PE effectively frequently transforms relationship dynamics.
Some men have experienced PE their entire adult lives (lifelong PE). Others develop it after a period of normal function — following stress, relationship changes, hormonal shifts, or a new medication. Both are treatable. The approach differs.
PE is not a character flaw. It has documented causes — and documented medical treatments.
We treat it as the medical condition it is. A free consultation gives you a clear evaluation and a protocol you can start immediately Physical causes including prostate inflammation, hormonal imbalances, neurological factors, and ED connections are all assessed as part of a complete PE evaluation at Iuventus.
PE has a cause. Usually more than one.
Premature ejaculation is driven by a combination of neurobiological sensitivity, psychological patterns, and in some cases hormonal factors. Serotonin plays a key role — men with PE tend to have altered serotonin receptor sensitivity in the pathways that regulate ejaculatory timing. This is partly genetic, partly learned, and highly treatable.
Psychological contributors — performance anxiety, relationship stress, early sexual experiences — are real and significant. But they're rarely the whole story. Most men with PE have both a physiological predisposition and a psychological pattern that reinforces it. Treatment that addresses only one rarely produces lasting results.
The good news: PE responds well to medical treatment. Topical agents, low-dose daily SSRIs, behavioral techniques, and in some cases hormonal support produce meaningful, lasting improvement for the vast majority of patients. Most men see results within 2–4 weeks of starting treatment.
We assess neurobiological sensitivity, psychological contributors, relationship dynamics, testosterone levels, and previous treatment history. A complete picture leads to a complete solution.
A treatment built around your specific pattern.
PE treatment isn't one-size-fits-all. The cause — lifelong vs. acquired, neurobiological vs. psychological, mild vs. severe — determines the protocol. We build yours after a complete evaluation.
Not sure which one? We'll guide you after reviewing your bloodwork.
Which approach fits your situation?
PE has multiple causes — physical, psychological, and hormonal. Treatment is matched to the root cause. Prostate and neurological causes are also assessed and addressed where indicated.
| Feature | Topical ⭐ | SSRI Protocol | Behavioral + Med | Hormonal support |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Onset of effect | Same session | 4–8 weeks | 4–12 weeks | 6–8 weeks |
| Systemic effect | ✗ No | ✓ Yes | ✗ No | ✓ Yes |
| On-demand use | ✓ Yes | ✗ Daily | Practice-based | ✗ Daily |
| Best for type | All PE types | Lifelong PE | Acquired / anxiety | PE + Low T |
| Approx. timeline | Immediate | 4–8 weeks | 4–12 weeks | 6–8 weeks |
PE is treatable. Most men who seek help get results.
The clinical literature on PE treatment is consistent: combined protocols (topical + behavioral, or topical + pharmacological) produce the highest rates of improvement. Men who seek medical treatment report not just longer duration — but reduced anxiety, improved confidence, and meaningfully better sexual satisfaction.
From consultation to control.
A private, judgment-free conversation with our physician. We ask about your symptoms, patterns, history, and goals. Many patients find this conversation alone brings significant relief.
Evaluation of neurobiological, hormonal, and psychological contributors. A targeted lab panel if hormonal factors are suspected.
Your physician designs a protocol matched to your specific pattern — topical, pharmacological, behavioral, or a combination. You understand exactly what you're doing and why.
Most patients see improvement within 2–4 weeks. We follow up to adjust dosing or technique as you report back on your response.
Medicine that
gets you.
Over 15 years treating sensitive men's health concerns in Las Vegas — with clinical precision and complete discretion.
Medical approach to a medical condition
PE has documented neurobiological causes. We treat it with the same clinical rigor as any other medical condition.
Complete discretion
A private clinical environment where you can speak openly. Most patients have never discussed this with anyone before coming to us.
Combined protocols
We combine topical, pharmacological, and behavioral approaches because combined protocols produce the highest success rates.
Results within weeks
Most patients notice meaningful improvement within 2–4 weeks of starting treatment. We follow up and adjust until the result is right.
Men who took
the first step.
Everything you
want to know.
The conversation is easier
than you think.
A free, private consultation. A clear evaluation. A protocol that works. Most patients leave their first visit with a plan they can start immediately.