The conversation around it tends to stop at medication, be it a prescription drug, a certain blue pill or any other temporary solution. What gets left out of most discussions on the subject is that ED is rarely just a mechanical problem, and for a growing number of men, there are regenerative approaches that work at a different level entirely.
Around one in four men in the U.S. experiences difficulties with erections, according to research published in the Journal of Sexual Medicine in 2024. By their 40s, roughly 40% of men are affected, with prevalence increasing by about 10% for each subsequent decade of life. Global projections estimate that ED will affect 322 million men worldwide, underscoring its scale as a public health concern. Despite that, stigma around the condition leads to significant underreporting, making early detection and management consistently difficult.
Why Medication Isn’t Always the Answer
PDE5 inhibitors like sildenafil and tadalafil work for many men by increasing blood flow to penile tissue at the moment of intercourse. They don’t address what’s driving the dysfunction in the first place. For men whose ED has vascular, neurological, or tissue-based roots, the medication manages the symptom without touching the underlying cause, and for some men, they might even stop working over time, or produce side effects that make regular use difficult.
Regenerative therapies take a different approach: rather than relying on external substances to manage symptoms, they aim to stimulate the body’s own capacity to repair and regenerate tissue, with the goal of restoring normal erectile function at its source, which is of particular importance for men who are looking for longer-term improvement rather than ongoing pharmaceutical dependence.
What the P-Shot Is and How It Works
The P-Shot, short for Priapus Shot, is a platelet-rich plasma (PRP) injection administered directly to penile tissue. PRP is drawn from your own blood, then centrifuged to concentrate the plasma. That concentrated solution is dense with growth factors that support tissue repair, promote new blood vessel formation, and may improve nerve function over time.
A 2024 meta-analysis covering 12 controlled trials and 991 patients found that the PRP group demonstrated better outcomes in erectile function scores compared to control groups, with a statistically significant standardized mean difference. A separate 2025 systematic review analyzing seven randomized controlled trials found that IIEF scores improved significantly at 12 weeks and 24 weeks after PRP treatment, with the strongest results at the six-month follow-up.
It’s worth being direct about where the science stands. The P-Shot is an emerging treatment, backed by promising clinical data but not yet a first-line standard of care. Results vary between individuals, and the research community continues to call for larger, longer-term trials to fully characterize outcomes. For men who have not responded adequately to conventional approaches, or who want to address the condition at a regenerative level, it represents a clinically grounded option worth a serious conversation.
Beyond ED, PRP injections have also been studied in men with Peyronie’s disease, where scar tissue causes curvature and pain that can make intercourse difficult. A 2025 study found that PRP helped reduce both the curvature and plaque buildup associated with the condition.
The Broader Picture
ED doesn’t exist in isolation. The psychological and emotional impact of the condition can be significant, affecting not only the individual but also their partner, with unaddressed ED contributing to anxiety, depression, diminished self-esteem, and strained relationships. Addressing it clinically isn’t just about physical performance per se, but quality of life in a much broader sense.
ED is also frequently an early signal of underlying cardiovascular or metabolic issues. Reduced blood flow to penile tissue often reflects the same vascular dysfunction that shows up elsewhere in the body. A physician-led evaluation doesn’t just address the presenting concern. It creates an opportunity to look at the broader picture of a man’s health.
Why Physician Oversight Matters Here
The P-Shot requires precise preparation and injection technique. The quality of PRP varies significantly depending on how it’s processed, and the injection protocol matters for both safety and efficacy. This is not a procedure where standardization is optional.
At Noor Esthetique and Wellness Center, men’s sexual health is approached with the same clinical rigor applied to every service offered. The starting point is always a thorough evaluation to understand what’s actually driving the concern before determining the right course of action. For some men, that conversation leads to PRP. For others, it points toward hormone optimization, lifestyle factors, or a combination of approaches.
If you’ve been managing this on your own or relying on medication without ever addressing the underlying cause, it’s worth having a different kind of conversation. Book a consultation at glowwithnoor.com.