We don’t talk enough about how much prostate surgery can rearrange a man’s entire identity. It’s not just a gland being removed. It’s intimacy, spontaneity, confidence — all suddenly on life support. I’ve spoken with urologists who’ve performed over a thousand prostatectomies, and even they admit: no two men heal the same. One walks into rehab with a spring in his step and gets spontaneous erections by month nine. Another, doing everything right, still relies on pills or devices 18 months later. That changes everything — both medically and emotionally.
The Reality of Erectile Function After Radical Prostatectomy
Radical prostatectomy — the surgical removal of the prostate gland — is a common treatment for localized prostate cancer. Around 100,000 men undergo this procedure annually in the U.S. alone. The goal is cancer control. But the trade-offs? They’re real. Nerve-sparing techniques have improved outcomes, but even in optimal cases, erectile dysfunction (ED) affects somewhere between 30% and 80% of patients post-op, depending on age, surgical approach, and baseline function.
Let’s be clear about this: “getting a hard on” isn’t just about desire. It’s about blood flow, nerve signaling, psychological readiness, and anatomical integrity. After surgery, one or more of these pieces may be compromised. The nerves that trigger erections run millimeters from the prostate. Even with the most delicate dissection, they can be bruised, stretched, or — in non-nerve-sparing cases — intentionally removed.
How Nerve Damage Affects Erections
These tiny cavernous nerves, part of the pelvic plexus, are responsible for sending the “go” signal to the penile arteries. When they’re injured — even slightly — the blood rush needed for rigidity slows or fails. Recovery can take 6 to 24 months. Some men regain function gradually, like a dimmer switch slowly turning up. Others? It’s more like rewiring a house with old circuits — some rooms work, others stay dark.
And here’s what people don’t think about enough: recovery isn’t linear. A man might have a strong erection one night — then nothing for weeks. That inconsistency chips away at confidence. Because it’s not just physical; it’s psychological. You start questioning if it was real or just a fluke.
Factors That Influence Sexual Recovery
Age is the elephant in the room. A 55-year-old man with good pre-op function and bilateral nerve-sparing surgery has a roughly 60-70% chance of regaining erections sufficient for intercourse within two years. For a 70-year-old, that drops to 30-40%. Baseline erectile function matters more than most realize — if you needed Viagra before surgery, odds decrease significantly.
Other factors? Surgical approach (robotic vs open), surgeon experience (those who perform over 200 prostatectomies annually see better nerve preservation), and rehabilitation effort. Yes, rehab — because penile tissue needs stimulation to stay healthy, even when erections aren’t happening. Which explains why early use of PDE5 inhibitors (like Viagra or Cialis) is often encouraged — even if you’re not sexually active. It’s like physical therapy for the penis.
Rehabilitation: Can You Train Your Way Back?
It sounds strange, maybe even desperate: “penile rehabilitation.” But it’s a real, evidence-backed strategy. The idea is simple: prevent atrophy. Without regular blood flow, the smooth muscle in the corpora cavernosa can fibrose — stiffen up, lose elasticity. Once that happens, recovery becomes far more difficult.
Protocols vary. Some doctors push for early PDE5 inhibitor use — daily Cialis, for instance — starting as early as two weeks post-op. Others recommend vacuum erection devices (VEDs), which mechanically draw blood into the penis. Studies show mixed results. A 2020 meta-analysis found VED users had a 1.8x higher chance of regaining spontaneous function at 12 months — but adherence is poor. (It’s awkward, time-consuming, and emotionally taxing to use a pump when you’re still healing from major surgery.)
And then there’s injection therapy — alprostadil shots directly into the side of the penis. Effective? Yes. About 70% of men get a usable erection. But many find the idea of self-injecting so unappealing they’d rather abstain. Fair enough. That said, some couples report these injections restore intimacy faster — because they allow real sexual activity, not just fantasy.
PDE5 Inhibitors: More Than Just a Pill
Viagra, Cialis, Levitra — these aren’t magic bullets. They don’t work without sexual stimulation. And after prostate surgery, stimulation alone may not be enough. Still, daily low-dose tadalafil (Cialis) has shown promise in preserving tissue health. One study followed men for 24 months: 58% in the daily Cialis group regained erectile function vs. 36% in the as-needed group.
But—and this is a big but—they don’t work for everyone. For men with severe nerve damage, these drugs might produce a slight firmness, nothing more. And side effects? Headaches, nasal congestion, visual disturbances. Not deal-breakers, but enough to make some men quit.
Vacuum Devices and Injections: The Less Talked-About Options
Vacuum erection devices are clunky. They look like science projects from the 1980s. But they work. You place a cylinder over the penis, pump out air, create suction, then slide a constriction ring to the base. Blood fills the shaft. Rigidity achieved. Duration? Up to 30 minutes. Success rates hover around 60-70%.
Injections are more effective — 70-80% success — but psychologically harder to accept. Yet, in private, many men admit: once they try it, it’s not as bad as they feared. One patient told me, “After the first time, I stopped feeling like a lab rat and started feeling like a man again.” That’s the kind of nuance you don’t get in pamphlets.
Penile Implants: The Last Resort That Works
When all else fails, there’s the penile prosthesis. Two types: malleable rods and inflatable implants. The latter — three-piece inflatable — is the gold standard. You press a pump in the scrotum, fluid moves from a reservoir to cylinders in the penis, and you get an erection on demand. Deflation? A release valve.
Success rates? Over 90%. Patient satisfaction? One of the highest in urology. A 2018 study found 94% of men would have the surgery again. But complications happen: infection (3-5%), mechanical failure (10% at 10 years), erosion. And it’s irreversible — once you go implant, there’s no going back to natural function.
The cost? $15,000 to $25,000, usually covered by insurance if ED is post-surgical. Waiting period? Generally 6 to 12 months post-op — gives time for natural recovery before jumping to surgery.
Pelvic Floor Therapy vs Medications: Which Approach Wins?
Pelvic floor physical therapy is gaining traction. Not the kind that treats incontinence — though that’s often included — but targeted exercises to improve erectile control. Some men report better rigidity, stronger orgasms, even spontaneous erections after months of training. But data is thin. A 2021 pilot study showed modest improvement in IIEF scores (erectile function questionnaire), but it was small — just 40 participants.
Medications, meanwhile, have decades of research. We know how they work. We know their limits. So which wins? Honestly, it’s not a competition. The best outcomes come from combining approaches: meds, devices, therapy, even counseling. Because let’s face it — this isn’t just a plumbing problem. It’s a brain-body connection unraveling and trying to rewire.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long after prostate surgery can you get an erection?
It varies. Some men see signs of recovery at 3-6 months. Most don’t see meaningful function until 9-18 months. A small number continue improving at 24 months. But if you’ve had no response to rehab by 18 months, chances of spontaneous recovery drop sharply. That’s when implants or other interventions become more realistic options.
Is ED permanent after prostate removal?
Not always. For many, it’s temporary, lasting several months to a couple of years. But for others — especially older men or those with pre-existing vascular issues — it can be permanent. The key word is “can.” We’re far from it being a guaranteed outcome, but it’s a real risk. About 20-30% of men with favorable factors fully recover. The rest find workarounds — and many are satisfied.
Can you still orgasm after prostate surgery?
Yes — but it’s different. No ejaculation, since the prostate and seminal vesicles are gone. It’s called “dry orgasm.” Sensation varies. Some men describe it as less intense. Others say it’s just as powerful, just quieter. And yes, you can still feel pleasure, have an erection, and enjoy sex. It’s just a new normal.
The Bottom Line
You can get a hard on after prostate surgery — but it may not look or feel like it used to. Recovery is a marathon, not a sprint, and success isn’t measured in hardness alone. It’s measured in connection, in courage, in showing up even when your body betrays you. I find this overrated: the idea that erections define masculinity. But I also understand why they matter. They’re symbols — of vitality, of desire, of being desired.
So what’s the real answer? Yes, it’s possible. But it takes time, effort, and often medical help. Some men need pills. Some need pumps. Some need implants. And some never fully regain what they lost — yet still rebuild fulfilling sex lives. That’s the thing people miss: function isn’t binary. It’s a spectrum. And on that spectrum, progress — however slow — is still victory. Because after surviving cancer, isn’t any step forward worth celebrating?