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The effects of the age of male early life circumcision on sexual functions later in life

IntroductionAccording to psychoanalytic theory performing circumcision on a boy in phallic phase may aggravate this fear and cause sexual dysfunctions later in life. However this hypothesis is an unverified common-view rather than a scientifically proven conclusion.ObjectivesWe hypothesized that bei...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:European psychiatry 2021-04, Vol.64 (S1), p.S546-S547
Main Authors: Esen, E.C., Özer, S., Yıldırım, Ö., Hasırcı, E., Şah, C., Şahin, B., Duran, B., Çınar, Ö., Cihan, A., Kazaz, İ., Gül, Ü., Deliktaş, H., Kızılkan, Y., Altınkol, A., Kurt, H., Tosun, Ç., Güdeloğlu, A., Üre, İ., Tutuş, A., Alkış, O., Bozkurt, O., Turunç, T., Akkuş, K.
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Language:English
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Summary:IntroductionAccording to psychoanalytic theory performing circumcision on a boy in phallic phase may aggravate this fear and cause sexual dysfunctions later in life. However this hypothesis is an unverified common-view rather than a scientifically proven conclusion.ObjectivesWe hypothesized that being circumcised during phallic phase is not a risk factor for sexual dysfunction. We also took a peak at how the experience of circumcision is being perceived and its psychological effects. Our secondary hypothesis was, sexual dysfunctions are more frequent among men who had a traumatic circumcision experience.MethodsFor this cross-sectional study, a total of 2768 sexually active, circumcised and voluntary men were recruited from 20 different urology outpatient clinics around Turkey.ResultsThere was no significant difference for PEDT and IIEF scores between participants who were circumcised at different ages (Graph-1,2). When participants were divided into 3 groups according to their circumcision age in accordance with psychoanalytic theory (before, after and during phallic phase) mean IIEF and PEDT scores did not differ. PEDT scores did not differ either by which emotion the participant describe their experience of circumcision or how vividly he remembered it. However participants who remembered their circumcision experience more vividly and had who describe their circumcision experience with fear/anxiety had a higher IIEF score (Graph-3).ConclusionsThe age of circumcision does not affect the risk of PE. This is one of the very few studies that challenges psychoanalytic theory with a scientific method. Remembering the circumcision experience with fear or anxiety did not increase the risk of sexual dysfunctions.
ISSN:0924-9338
1778-3585
DOI:10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.1456