Masturbation can be proved one way of preventing prostate cancer. Researchers suggest a man to masturbate at least 12 times a month to remove carcinogenic substances that can harm the male prostate gland.
Some studies have suggested that many men to masturbate in order to avoid prostate cancer. Researchers from Australia have conducted a survey of 1,000 men to know their sexual habits, especially masturbation. And the result is indeed proven to prevent masturbation men from prostate cancer.
But the key to prevent prostate cancer it is not the masturbation itself, but in the process of ejaculation. Ejaculatory fluid allows the sperm that may be carcinogenic. So, with ejaculation body can perform the cleaning process and the expenditure of toxic substances through the medium of sperm.
Based on a 2004 study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, to prevent the formation of prostate cancer, the researchers suggested that a man does ejaculate at least 12 times a month.
Researchers say that the increase in ejaculate as much as 3 times per week will directly reduce the risk of prostate cancer to 15 percent. Even men who do masturbate 5 times a week is very rarely known that prostate cancer later in life.
Processes that occur during ejaculation masturbation will remove the accumulation of toxic substances in the male prostate gland. Prostate gland to leak into the semen when ejaculation which would enable the union of sperm and prevent toxic substances with the sperm.
But the researchers suggest masturbate only if it is not possible to have sex with the wife. Because instead of masturbating, having sex with a partner directly would be more healthful. Masturbation is known very effective in preventing prostate cancer, especially if done by men from the age of 20 years.
If not removed, toxic substances in the prostate gland such as potassium, zinc, citric acid, 3-methylchloranthrene likely to be carcinogenic substance. “The point is simple, the more often you clean the ‘pipes’, the less bacteria that gather in it,” says Graham Giles of the Cancer Council Victoria, Melbourne, as quoted from AskMen.
