Medication
Oral and topical agents that delay ejaculation — first-line for most men, especially acquired PE.
Key features
- Dapoxetine (on-demand)
- SSRIs (daily)
- Topical anesthetics
- PDE5i if ED coexists
A complete triple approach to premature ejaculation — medication, behavioral therapy, and surgical nerve block — matched to your type and severity. Board-certified urologist in Seomyeon, Busan. Dr. Moon Hyeon-chang has treated PE for 15+ years with an honest, stepwise method.

Premature ejaculation is the most common male sexual complaint, yet it is very treatable. Learn from Dr. Moon Hyeon-chang how a triple approach — medication, behavioral techniques, and (when needed) surgical nerve block — addresses both lifelong and acquired PE. 15+ years of experience, explained in clear English.
Dr. Moon personally manages each case at our Busan Seomyeon practice with a stepwise philosophy: start with the least invasive option that works. Many men succeed with medication and behavioral therapy alone; surgery is reserved for lifelong PE that does not respond. This hub links the detailed treatment pages.
PE responds best to a combined, stepwise approach. These three pillars are matched to your type and severity.
Oral and topical agents that delay ejaculation — first-line for most men, especially acquired PE.
Proven techniques — stop-start, squeeze, pelvic floor training — that build lasting ejaculatory control.
Dorsal nerve block (selective neurectomy) reduces glans hypersensitivity — for lifelong PE unresponsive to other care.
Most men do best with a tailored combination, adjusted to response over time.
Each option below is part of the stepwise plan. Dr. Moon matches them to whether your PE is lifelong or acquired and how severe it is.
Dapoxetine taken before activity delays ejaculation — designed specifically for PE.
Taken as needed before sex.
Daily low-dose SSRIs raise the ejaculatory threshold for consistent control.
For frequent activity or lifelong PE.
Creams or sprays reduce glans sensitivity; simple and used with or without oral medication.
Applied before activity.
Stop-start and squeeze methods, plus pelvic floor training, build lasting control.
Most effective combined with medication.
Selective neurectomy reduces glans hypersensitivity for refractory lifelong PE — see the dedicated page.
See the Triple Nerve Block page.
If erectile dysfunction coexists, treating it often improves PE control too.
See the ED treatment pages.
Effective treatment starts with classifying PE (lifelong vs acquired) and ruling out related factors like ED or anxiety.
Determining whether PE is lifelong or acquired, its severity, and impact — which guides treatment.
Estimating intravaginal ejaculatory latency time and screening for coexisting ED or anxiety.
Physical assessment including glans sensitivity, relevant to whether surgery could help.
A tailored plan starting with the least invasive effective option, escalating only if needed.
Lifelong and acquired PE respond differently. These tiers explain the stepwise logic.
Dr. Moon classifies PE and starts with the least invasive effective option — surgery only for refractory lifelong cases.
PE care benefits from an honest, stepwise approach. These are the differences that matter.
Start with the least invasive option that works — surgery only when truly needed.
Dr. Moon personally handles every consultation and treatment.
Discreet, judgment-free consultation in clear English.
Access to the complete range — medication, behavioral, topical, and surgery.
Korean pricing well below US/UK private equivalents.
WhatsApp follow-up to adjust treatment after you return home.
The triple approach combines three pillars: medication (on-demand dapoxetine, daily SSRIs, topical anesthetics), behavioral therapy (stop-start, squeeze, pelvic floor training), and — for refractory lifelong PE — surgical dorsal nerve block.
Most men succeed with the first two; surgery is reserved for cases that do not respond.
It depends on the approach. Medication and behavioral therapy are modest in cost; topical options are inexpensive. Surgical dorsal nerve block (triple nerve block) is priced separately — see that page.
Korean pricing is well below US/UK private equivalents. Consultation gives you a clear quote.
No — surgery is a last resort. Most men, especially with acquired PE, succeed with medication and behavioral techniques. Surgical dorsal nerve block is reserved for lifelong PE that has not responded to other treatment. Dr. Moon always starts with the least invasive effective option.
Lifelong PE has been present since first sexual experiences; acquired PE develops later, often with an identifiable cause (anxiety, ED, prostatitis). The distinction matters because acquired PE often responds to treating the cause, while lifelong refractory PE may benefit from surgery.
Yes. The two often coexist, and treating ED frequently improves PE control. Dr. Moon screens for both and can treat them together — for example, combining a PDE5 inhibitor with a PE medication. See the ED treatment pages for details.
Message Dr. Moon on WhatsApp for a discreet, judgment-free consultation. Describe your situation and you will receive a preliminary stepwise plan — most of which can begin without travel, with surgery discussed only if needed.
Free WhatsApp consultation with Dr. Moon. Describe your situation discreetly — receive an honest, stepwise plan starting with the least invasive effective option.

Address:
7F-702, Ion City Building, 74 Seomyeon-ro, Busanjin-gu, Busan, South Korea
All Rights Reserved | Urogyn Men's Clinic Busan