Do Condoms Cause ED? (and what to do about it)If you are engaging in sexual relationship with a new partner, using condoms is the only way to protect you from sexual transmitted diseases (STD).

But nobody likes using condoms. What’s more, many men complain about condoms causing ED.

The good news is that this shouldn’t be an issue. In fact, there is an easy fix.

Many men complain of erection loss during sex with a condom. Since they believe that the condom is responsible, they often remove it before the sexual episode is completed. This obviously carries a serious risk of spreading sexually transmitted diseases, which has motivated scientists to get involved in working on a solution.

In a multinational study published in the Journal of Sexual Medicine in August 2015, the authors concluded that condom use did not, in fact, cause the erectile difficulties. They recruited 479 men between the ages of 18 and 24 and asked them about their condom use and their ability to get and keep an erection while putting it on and during intercourse.

Of the participants, 38.4% reported no erectile difficulties during condom use, 13.8% reported ED while putting it on, 15.7% reported ED during penile-vaginal intercourse, and 32.2% reported ED during both condom application and penile-vaginal intercourse.

Incredibly, this means that 61.7 percent of men report some erectile problems during condom use, with 47.9 per cent experiencing such problems during intercourse.

The authors also asked the men about sex without a condom. This is where it becomes interesting. The 47.9 percent who experienced ED during intercourse were substantially more likely to have ED while having sex without a condom, too. In other words, it’s not the condom’s fault!

It is possible that men blame condoms because they want to avoid recognizing the dismaying possibility that they have ED. This is not only a health risk, but also a psychological issue that may lead them to put the kind of performance pressure on themselves that will almost certainly aggravate their ED during sex with and without a condom. Think of it this way: if you don’t admit it, then you cannot tackle it and your ED will continue indefinitely.

It is also worth mentioning that grabbing at Viagra or any other PDE5 inhibitor is not the answer to ED during condom use. The Journal of Sexual Medicine published another study in 2009 that concluded that men who used PDE5 inhibitors were three times more likely to report erection loss during sex while using a condom. So if you use a condom, you will have to deal with the real causes of the ED, rather than simply drawing on the strongest drug you can find.

If you are sure that you have erectile difficulties only while using a condom, it is unlikely, but possible, that you are right. After all, In the above study, a minority of the men who struggled with condom-related ED were sexually totally functional without a condom.

If you are in this minority, a multinational team revealed the three main causes of condom-related ED in an article in a 2006 issue of Sexual Health. Men who lack confidence to use condoms correctly, men who don’t like how condoms fit or feel, and men who have more than three sexual partners in a three-month period are most likely to have ED while using a condom.

All three of these problems seem remediable. Learning to use a condom correctly should take care of the lack of confidence, experimenting until you find one that fits properly should do away with the discomfort, and having sex with fewer different partners will kill the last problem.

But that doesn’t eliminate the fact that majority of men over 40 experience some level of ED. Here is a 3-minute technique that has been used by thousands of men to completely eliminate their ED on the spot…

If you believe lack of testosterone is at play, here is the only herbal remedy I recommend to boost testosterone level and eliminate ED…