Does Intimacy Increase Testosterone or Is It a Myth?

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This article was reviewed by Kelly Brown, MD.

Whether you played a sport in high school, college or even at the professional level, chances are you heard someone in a locker room talking about intimacy before the big game. 

But is this just superstition? Does intimacy increase testosterone and thus athletic performance?

As you probably know, hormones like testosterone are deeply linked to how our bodies function. Beyond performance and drive, testosterone can affect everything from your mood to your hair.

But exactly what increases or decreases those hormone levels can sometimes be a little more vague.

Intimacy’s impact on your testosterone levels isn’t terribly complicated, thankfully. However, the implications of those effects can mean a lot for your health, your athleticism and plenty of other elements of your life.

Does being intimate increase testosterone levels? Let’s break this down into simple parts, starting with the relationship between intimacy and hormones.

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Intimacy and Testosterone Levels: How They’re Related

Before we examine how testosterone production and intimate behavior affect each other, it’s important to understand how hormones like testosterone actually work.

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Hormones and the Body

Hormones do many things for our bodies. They’re essentially molecules that affect certain biochemical processes of cellular function. An even more compact way of stating this is that they’re sort of like command prompts for your cells, organs and other bodily functions.

Hormones regulate how your body grows. They regulate your production of vital chemicals like insulin. They affect your drive, hair, muscles, skin — you get the picture.

If you’re reproducing, metabolizing, fighting, sprinting or even sleeping, there’s a good chance a hormone told your body to complete the task.

Hormones also help regulate blood levels. It takes a nearly imperceptible volume of these molecular messengers to keep an organ or tissue functioning — or to shut it down completely.

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Hormones and Testosterone Production

In the case of intimate function, testosterone is a key player in your drive. It regulates phosphodiesterase type 5 enzymes (PDE5s) necessary for the actual “arousal” part of intimacy.

Research suggests that when things veer outside of normal testosterone levels, it can affect your intimate performance. Studies have shown that high testosterone levels are associated with PE, while lower levels of testosterone are associated with dysfunction — both delayed discharge and reduced volume.

So, yes, there is a strong relationship between intimacy and testosterone. But these relationships don’t always work the way we expect them to.

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How Intimacy Affects Your Hormone Levels

Just because hormone levels can affect intimacy doesn’t mean intimacy can affect your hormone levels. And the science we have pretty clearly backs this up.

For instance, while research shows a close connection between testosterone and your ability to achieve arousal during intimacy, there’s actually no relationship between having arousal and the presence of testosterone.

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Potential Effects of Intimacy on Levels of Testosterone

It gets even more confusing when you understand that a 1993 study of 60 men looked at the relationship between intimate activity and testosterone levels across various ages, marital status and other variables.

The research concluded that there’s actually no relationship between testosterone levels and intimate activity. In other words, men with high testosterone levels aren’t having more or less intimacy.

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Testosterone After Intimacy: Does Intimacy Increase Testosterone?

Is this an open-and-shut case against intimacy increasing your testosterone? Not exactly.

To understand what’s going on, we need to take a more nuanced look at testosterone and intimacy.

2003 study examined serum testosterone levels in 28 volunteers during periods of abstinence after discharge.

What the researchers found was interesting. The first few days after discharge, hormone levels didn’t fluctuate significantly, but by day seven, serum testosterone levels reached nearly 150 percent of the baseline levels.

These fluctuations weren’t permanent, nor were they substantial in the long term. But they did prove a critical point: testosterone levels could be more influenced by a lack of intimacy than by intimacy itself.

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Effects of Going Solo and Intimate Stimuli on Testosterone

A 2021 review suggested a more nuanced relationship between testosterone levels and intimate activity. Short-term increases from watching adult movies or participating in intimacy can occur, and limited results show the same could be true for going solo.

In other words, intimacy can increase testosterone levels. But so can abstinence in some cases, depending on frequency.

And before the abstinence fans gloat, there’s one more thing we have to point out. 

Though the seven-day study did show serum increases, previous studies have shown that reduced intimate activity due to ED lowers testosterone. And resuming intimate activity restores equilibrium from that drop in testosterone levels, regardless of whether the ED was treated.

This tells us is intimacy can have an impact on testosterone levels, but the scope of that impact is unclear — and potentially temporary.

For the most part, claims about abstinence and testosterone are usually a reach. Testosterone levels have more to do with healthy endocrine function and age than your weekly, monthly or annual average.

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The Connection Between ED and Testosterone Levels

Intimacy and fluctuations in intimate desire don’t seem to have a meaningful effect on testosterone. But testosterone itself, as well as testosterone therapy or testosterone replacement therapy, can certainly affect your intimate activity in major ways.

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Does Intimacy Increase Testosterone in Men with ED?

The first thing you need to understand is that testosterone levels decrease as we age. It’s just a part of life and the changes that occur as you get older.

It’s generally understood that low testosterone levels are one of the major causes of endocrine ED as men get older.

Hypogonadotropic Hypogonadism (when your pituitary gland doesn’t produce enough hormones) is an established ED cause. Treating it with hormone therapy has been shown to improve the signs and symptoms of ED in men suffering from ED due to endocrine issues.

Hypogonadotropic Hypogonadism is generally considered the least common cause of ED. It’s kind of morbid to think of it this way, but the causes of ED are a bit like the potential causes of death.

According to the CDC, the number one cause of death is heart disease. According to the National Library of Medicine, the same is true of ED.

So rather than treat ED with more intimacy or testosterone injections, it’s best to consider whether health conditions like cardiovascular disease are at fault.

You can check out our guide to the causes of ED for more information. 

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Intimacy and Testosterone: The Big Picture

Your intimate life probably isn’t the primary cause of any positive or negative effects on your testosterone levels. The amount of intimacy you’d have to have to make serious or long-term changes to your testosterone levels is too epic to calculate.

If you’re trying to crank your testosterone up ahead of your club softball playoffs, abstaining for at least seven days might increase your testosterone levels — but that seems like a heavy price to pay.

In the bigger picture, testosterone is only important when it rises or falls outside the normal range. If you’re seeing problems that might be associated with out-of-balance T levels, it’s time to get off the internet and in front of a healthcare professional.

A healthcare provider brings you numerous benefits. They can aid you with health tips and recommendations for problems like ED, low drive, hair loss and whatever else you might be worried about. And they can diagnose other potential causes of these problems.

As for competitive sports, do whatever you think gives you the best edge. Just don’t deprive yourself for too long, and don’t hesitate to reach out for a professional opinion.

This article originally appeared on Hims.com and was syndicated by MediaFeed.org.

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