Men’s Health
A more elevated approach to men’s health — grounded in sexual medicine, hormone evaluation, fertility, urinary health, and performance-focused care for men who want thoughtful answers and a treatment plan that actually fits real life.
Men’s health is not one symptom. It is a pattern.
Men often arrive thinking they have one isolated issue — low energy, weaker erections, urinary changes, lower confidence, or fertility concerns. In practice, those problems often overlap. Hormones, vascular health, sleep, stress, metabolism, urinary symptoms, relationship dynamics, and age-related changes can all shape how a man feels in his body.
The strongest men’s health page should make the visit feel broader, smarter, and more refined: less reactive, less generic, and more aligned with the way men actually experience these issues in real life.
Sexual health is health
Erectile quality, libido, ejaculation, and arousal are not fringe concerns. They often reflect broader hormonal, vascular, neurologic, or stress-related patterns.
Low testosterone is only part of the picture
Energy, mood, recovery, body composition, concentration, sleep, and sexual function can all be affected when hormones shift.
Quality of life matters here too
Prostate enlargement, pelvic discomfort, urgency, frequency, and urinary flow changes can interfere with work, sleep, confidence, and comfort.
The best visit is not just symptom treatment
Excellent men’s health care includes prevention, screening conversations, lifestyle review, and treatment planning that considers long-term health, not just short-term relief.
Private, modern, and more medically precise.
This page should position men’s health as a category of care that brings together sexual medicine, hormone expertise, fertility insight, and general urology in one place. It should feel elevated, but still clinically grounded.
That means building trust with patients who may be hesitant to talk about erections, libido, semen, testosterone, urinary issues, or pelvic pain — and making it clear that those concerns can be evaluated seriously and without judgment.
- Low energy, lower libido, or a shift in confidence
- Erectile changes or performance concerns
- Questions about testosterone or hormone therapy
- Fertility and semen-quality concerns
- Peyronie’s disease or penile changes
- Urinary and prostate-related symptoms
- It separates symptoms that are hormonal from those that are vascular or stress-related
- It clarifies whether urinary and sexual symptoms are overlapping
- It helps men understand treatment paths with more confidence
- It creates a more useful plan for both short-term relief and long-term health
Built around the issues men actually bring in.
Frequently asked questions
A men’s health visit may include sexual function, libido, testosterone-related symptoms, fertility, urinary concerns, prostate symptoms, lifestyle factors, and broader wellness patterns that affect performance and quality of life.
No. Testosterone can matter, but so can vascular health, sleep, stress, medications, pelvic health, metabolic issues, fertility, and urinary function.
Yes. Erectile dysfunction can overlap with vascular, hormonal, neurologic, medication-related, and psychological factors, which is why a full evaluation is often more useful than symptom-only treatment.
Not necessarily. Many patients book because they want a baseline conversation about hormones, sexual function, fertility, urinary health, or prevention before a concern becomes more disruptive.
If you have persistent sexual, hormonal, urinary, or reproductive concerns — or simply want a more proactive men’s health evaluation — it is worth booking a consultation.
Ready for a more complete men’s health conversation?
If you want a more thoughtful approach to sexual function, hormones, fertility, urinary health, or performance in Los Angeles, request a consultation with Joshua R. Gonzalez, MD.
Los Angeles, CA 90036
(323) 607-2895
Monday–Friday: 9:00 AM–5:00 PM