Men’s Sexual Health • Los Angeles

Ejaculatory Disorders

Expert, discreet care for premature ejaculation, delayed ejaculation, retrograde ejaculation, and absent ejaculation — with evaluation designed to uncover the cause and build a treatment plan that feels precise, personal, and realistic.

West Hollywood / Miracle Mile • Consultation-first treatment planning
What This Includes Premature ejaculation, delayed ejaculation, retrograde ejaculation, and absent ejaculation are distinct problems with different causes and treatment paths.1, 2, 3, 4
How It’s Evaluated Guideline-based workup starts with medical, relationship, and sexual history, plus focused examination and targeted testing when appropriate.1, 5
How It’s Treated Treatment may include behavioral strategies, medication, counseling, partner-inclusive planning, and care for hormonal, neurologic, or medication-related contributors.1, 5, 6
Why this matters

Ejaculatory concerns can lead to frustration, performance anxiety, relationship stress, and reduced sexual confidence. When fertility is also a goal, disorders such as retrograde ejaculation or anejaculation can take on an additional layer of urgency.1, 3, 4

A better clinical approach

The most useful treatment plan begins with defining the problem clearly. Ejaculation that happens too soon, takes too long, goes backward into the bladder, or does not occur at all are not the same disorder — and they should not be approached as if they are.1, 2, 3, 4

A More Thoughtful Approach

Different disorder, different strategy.

Some ejaculatory disorders are more commonly tied to stress, anxiety, and performance pressure. Others are more closely linked to medication effects, surgery, diabetes, nerve injury, pelvic disease, hormone changes, or other medical causes. In many men, multiple factors overlap.1, 2, 3, 4

That is why care should not start with guesswork. It should start with a real conversation about what is happening, what changed, how much distress it is causing, and whether issues such as erectile dysfunction, orgasm difficulty, fertility concerns, or partner dynamics are also part of the picture.1, 5

At Joshua R. Gonzalez, MD, care is designed to feel confidential, medically grounded, and collaborative — with treatment tailored to the specific type of disorder and the person experiencing it.

Common Types

Not every ejaculation problem looks the same

Clarifying the pattern helps guide the next step.

01

Premature ejaculation

Premature ejaculation is generally described as ejaculation that happens sooner than desired, with reduced sense of control and associated distress. Behavioral techniques, medications, and counseling may all play a role in treatment.1, 6, 7

02

Delayed ejaculation

Delayed ejaculation involves taking a long time to reach climax and ejaculate despite sufficient stimulation, and some men may be unable to ejaculate at all. Causes can include medications, surgeries, chronic conditions, and psychological factors.2, 8

03

Retrograde ejaculation

Retrograde ejaculation means semen travels into the bladder instead of out through the penis. Men may notice a “dry orgasm” or cloudy urine after climax. It can affect fertility even if orgasm still occurs.3, 9

04

Anejaculation

Anejaculation refers to absent ejaculation during orgasm. It can be associated with neurologic issues, medication effects, surgery, or difficulty reaching orgasm itself, and it may also affect fertility planning.4, 10

Comprehensive Diagnosis

The workup should be specific to the pattern

The AUA/SMSNA guideline emphasizes history, focused examination, and shared decision-making as central to care. Evaluation may need to account for sexual function, relationship context, medication use, hormonal factors, neurologic history, and fertility priorities.1, 5

What the workup may include
  • Detailed medical, sexual, and relationship history
  • Review of onset, pattern, distress level, and ejaculation timing
  • Medication review, including antidepressants and other contributors
  • Focused physical exam when appropriate
  • Hormonal or neurologic evaluation in selected cases
  • Fertility-oriented testing when semen output is reduced or absent
Why precision matters

A man with premature ejaculation may benefit from a very different approach than a man with retrograde ejaculation after surgery or a man with delayed ejaculation linked to medications or erectile dysfunction. The better the diagnosis, the more targeted the treatment plan can be.1, 2, 3, 5

Treatment Options

Personalized treatment, built around the cause

Treatment is not one-size-fits-all. In current guidance and reference sources, options may include behavioral strategies, medication, psychotherapy or sex therapy, partner-inclusive counseling, and targeted management of underlying medical causes.1, 5, 6, 7

01

Behavioral therapy

Behavioral techniques may help some men with premature ejaculation improve control and reduce anxiety around performance.6, 7

02

Medication strategies

Medications may be used either to treat the ejaculatory disorder directly or to address an underlying contributor. In retrograde ejaculation, selected medications may be considered when fertility is a goal.3, 6, 9

03

Psychotherapy and counseling

Counseling or sex therapy can be an important part of care, especially when stress, anxiety, relationship strain, or conditioning around performance is part of the picture.1, 6, 7

04

Hormonal management

When endocrine factors are relevant, further hormone evaluation may be appropriate and treatment can be tailored to the findings rather than assumed in advance.1, 5

05

Partner-inclusive planning

The AUA/SMSNA guideline highlights shared decision-making and notes that involving sexual partners, when possible, may help optimize outcomes.1

06

Care for the full sexual health picture

In some men, ejaculation concerns overlap with erectile dysfunction, orgasm difficulty, or fertility goals. The plan works best when those concerns are addressed together rather than in isolation.1, 2, 5, 10

Your Visit, Simplified

A structured path forward

The goal is to replace uncertainty with a clear diagnosis and a treatment strategy that actually fits.

01

Conversation first

We start by defining the concern clearly: too soon, too late, dry orgasm, absent ejaculation, or a broader orgasm/sexual function issue.

02

Focused evaluation

History, examination, and targeted testing help identify whether the cause is psychological, hormonal, neurologic, medication-related, or structural.1, 5

03

Tailored plan

Treatment may include medication, behavioral strategies, counseling, partner-inclusive planning, or management of underlying medical contributors.

04

Follow-through

Follow-up allows the plan to be refined based on progress, side effects, symptom relief, and longer-term sexual health goals.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Clear answers, without the noise.

Ejaculatory disorders can include premature ejaculation, delayed ejaculation, retrograde ejaculation, and absent ejaculation. These are different conditions with different causes and treatment paths.1, 2, 3, 4

Yes. Stress, performance anxiety, and other psychological factors can contribute, especially in premature ejaculation and in some delayed ejaculation cases.1, 6, 7

Retrograde ejaculation happens when semen enters the bladder instead of leaving through the penis during orgasm. Men may notice very little semen or no semen with orgasm and cloudy urine afterward.3, 9

Yes. Certain medications can contribute to delayed ejaculation or other changes in sexual function, which is why a medication review is an important part of the evaluation.2, 5, 8

Yes. Retrograde ejaculation and anejaculation can make conception more difficult, which is one reason fertility goals should be part of the treatment discussion when relevant.3, 4, 9, 10

No. Treatment depends on the specific disorder, the likely cause, distress level, relationship context, and whether issues like erectile dysfunction or fertility are also involved. Shared decision-making is a central part of guideline-based care.1, 5

Private Inquiry

Ready for a more tailored conversation?

If you are experiencing ejaculatory concerns and want expert, discreet care in Los Angeles, request a consultation with Joshua R. Gonzalez, MD.

5757 Wilshire Blvd, Suite 475
Los Angeles, CA 90036
323.607.2895
Monday–Friday: 9:00 AM–5:00 PM
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