How erections work.
A short tour of the basic biology. Not a treatment guide. If you have erection trouble, see a doctor; this page is here to help you understand what they will be talking about.
Erection is mostly a hydraulic process. Blood flows in, the body holds it there, the body releases it. Knowing those three steps makes most erection trouble a lot less mysterious.
What follows is a quick tour of the biology and the common patterns of erection trouble. We do not cover treatment specifics. That is a clinical conversation.
Sources listed at the bottom of this page.
What happens during an erection
Sexual stimulation triggers nerves that release a chemical signal. That signal relaxes blood vessels in the penis. Blood flows in and fills two long chambers. The pressure presses against a sheath of tissue that traps the blood. The pelvic floor adds pressure that holds the erection.
That is most of it. When something in that chain does not work as it should, you can have erection trouble. Different causes affect different parts of the chain.
Common patterns of erection trouble
These are the categories doctors recognize. Identifying which fits you is something for a clinical visit.
Vascular (most common)
Gradual onset over years, often shows up alongside high blood pressure, diabetes, smoking, or high cholesterol. Treats well with lifestyle work, sometimes with medication. A doctor will discuss what fits.
Hormonal
Often paired with low desire and fatigue. A blood draw can show whether testosterone levels are low. Treatable. The path depends on your situation.
Nerve-related
Often after a specific event like prostate surgery or a spinal injury. Treatment depends on the cause and is highly individual.
Anxiety-driven
Often situational: present alone or with a new partner, absent with a familiar one (or vice versa). Often improves with brief therapy and reducing performance pressure.
What we know from research
Feldman 1994 (Massachusetts Male Aging Study) established the modern epidemiology of erectile dysfunction. Erection problems in middle age are common and often signal broader cardiovascular issues, which is one reason a doctor visit is worth it.
If you are having trouble
Run these in order. Steps one and two are doctor visits.
See your doctor
Bloodwork can identify hormonal or metabolic causes. Cardiovascular workup matters, especially over 40. Half an hour at the lab tells you a lot.
Discuss treatment options with your doctor
Several treatment paths exist. Whether any one is right for you depends on your specific situation. This is a doctor’s call.
Audit lifestyle
Sleep, weight, alcohol, exercise, smoking. Each one matters. Several of these change with consistent effort over a few months.
Pelvic-floor training
Pelvic-floor exercises help erection quality for some men. The kegels page covers the program.