Paris, Feb 16 - A large minority of male condom users complain that ill-fitting prophylactics are liable to split and break during intercourse and be a sexual turnoff, researchers said today.
US investigators analysed questionnaires completed by 436 men between the ages of 18 and 67 who had been recruited via ads in newspapers and a blog on the website of a condom sales company.
The volunteers had used condoms for vaginal intercourse in the previous three months.
A remarkable 44.7 percent of the respondents said they had experiences of condoms that were ill-fitting, the doctors found.
Poorly-fitting condoms more than doubled the risk of breakage, slippage, erection loss and difficulty in reaching an orgasm, either by the user or his partner. They were also five times likelier to cause irritation of the penis.
Such problems prompted many users to remove the condom before intercourse ended -- a worrying phenomenon in the fight against unwanted pregnancies and sexually-transmitted disease.
The work is reported online by the journal Sexually Transmitted Infections, published by the British Medical Association (BMA).