Erectile
dysfunction (ED or (male) impotence)
is a sexual dysfunction characterized by the inability to develop
or maintain an erection of the penis. There are various underlying
causes, such as cardiovascular leakage and diabetes, many of which
are medically treatable. Nerve trauma from prostatectomy surgery
can cause chronic erectile dysfunction.
The causes
of erectile dysfunction may be physiological or psychological. Physiologically,
erection is a hydraulic mechanism based upon blood entering and being
retained in the penis, and there are various ways in which this can be
impeded, most of which are amenable to treatment. Psychological impotence
is where erection or penetration fails due to thoughts or feelings (psychological
reasons) rather than physical impossibility; this can often be helped.
Notably in psychological impotence there is a very strong placebo effect.
Erectile
dysfunction, tied closely as it is to cultural notions of potency, success
and masculinity, can have devastating psychological consequences including
feelings of shame, loss or inadequacy; often unnecessary since in most
cases the matter can be helped. There is a strong culture of silence and
inability to discuss the matter. In fact around 1 in 10 men will experience
recurring impotence problems at some point in their lives.
Folk remedies
have long been advocated, with some being advertised widely since the
1930s. The introduction of the first pharmacologically approved remedy
for impotence, sildenafil (trade name Viagra), in the 1990s caused a wave
of public attention, propelled in part by heavy advertising.
The Latin
term impotentia coeundi describes simple inability to insert the penis
into the vagina. It is now mostly replaced by more precise terms. The
study of erectile dysfunction within medicine is covered by andrology,
a sub-field within urology.
Overview
and symptoms
Erectile dysfunction is characterized by the regular or repeated inability
to obtain or maintain an erection. There are several ways that erectile
dysfunction is analyzed:
Obtaining
full erections at some times, such as when asleep (when the mind and psychological
issues if any are less present), tends to suggest the physical structures
are functionally working. However the opposite case, a lack of nocturnal
erections, does not imply the opposite, since a significant proportion
of sexually functional men do not routinely get nocturnal erections or
wet dreams.
Obtaining erections which are either not rigid or full (lazy erection),
or are lost more rapidly than would be expected (often before or during
penetration), can be a sign of a failure of the mechanism which keeps
blood held in the penis, and may signify an underlying clinical condition,
often cardiovascular in origin.
Other factors leading to erectile dysfunction are diabetes mellitus (causing
neuropathy) or hypogonadism (decreased testosterone levels due to disease
affecting the testicles or the pituitary gland).
Erection problems are very common. The Sexual Dysfunction Association
estimates that 1 in 10 men in the UK have recurring problems with their
erections at some point in their life.
Pathophysiology
Penile erection is managed by two different mechanisms. The first one
is the reflex erection, which is achieved by directly touching the penile
shaft. The second is the psychogenic erection, which is achieved by erotic
or emotional stimuli. The former uses the peripheral nerves and the lower
parts of the spinal cord, whereas the latter uses the limbic system of
the brain. In both conditions an intact neural system is required for
a successful and complete erection. Stimulation of penile shaft by the
nervous system leads to the secretion of nitric oxide (NO), which causes
the relaxation of smooth muscles of corpora cavernosa (the main erectile
tissue of penis), and subsequently penile erection. Additionally, adequate
levels of testosterone (produced by the testes) and an intact pituitary
gland are required for the development of a healthy male erectile system.
As can be understood from the mechanisms of a normal erection, impotence
may develop due to hormonal deficiency, disorders of the neural system,
lack of adequate penile blood supply or psychological problems. Restriction
of blood flow can arise from impaired endothelial function due to the
usual causes associated with coronary artery disease, but can also include
causation by prolonged exposure to bright light.
Causes
- Neurogenic Disorders (spinal cord and brain injuries, nerve disorders
such as Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis,
and stroke.)
- Hormonal Disorders (pituitary gland tumor; low level of the hormone
testosterone).
- Arterial Disorders (peripheral vascular disease, hypertension; reduced
blood flow to the penis).
- Cavernosal Disorders (Peyronie's disease.)
- Nonphysical causes: Mental disorders (clinical depression, schizophrenia,
substance abuse, panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, personality
disorders or traits.), psychological problems, negative feelings.
- Surgery (radiation therapy, surgery of the colon, prostate, bladder,
or rectum may damage the nerves and blood vessels involved in erection.
Prostate and bladder cancer surgery often require removing tissue and
nerves surrounding a tumor, which increases the risk for impotence.)
- Aging.
- Lifestyle: alcohol and drugs, obesity, cigarette smoking.
- Other disorders.
A few causes of impotence may be iatrogenic (medically caused). Various
antihypertensives (medications intended to control high blood pressure)
and some drugs that modify central nervous system response may inhibit
erection by denying blood supply or by altering nerve activity.
Surgical
intervention for a number of different conditions may remove anatomical
structures necessary to erection, damage nerves, or impair blood supply.
Complete removal of the prostate gland or external beam radiotherapy of
the gland are common causes of impotence; both are treatments for prostate
cancer. Some studies have shown that male circumcision may result in an
increased risk of impotence, while others have found no such effect, and
another found the opposite.
Excessive
alcohol use has long been recognised as one cause of impotence, leading
to the euphemism "brewer's droop," or "whiskey dick;"
Shakespeare made light of this phenomenon in Macbeth.
A study in
2002 found that ED can also be associated with bicycling. The number of
hours on a bike and/or the pressure on the penis from the saddle of an
upright bicycle is directly related to erectile dysfunction.
Diagnosis
Medical
diagnosis
There are no formal tests to diagnose erectile dysfunction. Some blood
tests are generally done to exclude underlying disease, such as diabetes,
hypogonadism and prolactinoma. Impotence is also related to generally
poor physical health, poor dietary habits, obesity, and most specifically
cardiovascular disease such as coronary artery disease and peripheral
vascular disease.
A useful
and simple way to distinguish between physiological and psychological
impotence is to determine whether the patient ever has an erection. If
never, the problem is likely to be physiological; if sometimes (however
rarely), it could be physiological or psychological. The current diagnostic
and statistical manual of mental diseases (DSM-IV) has included a listing
for impotence.
Clinical Tests Used to Diagnose ED
Duplex ultrasound
Duplex ultrasound is used to evaluate blood flow, venous leak, signs of
atherosclerosis, and scarring or calcification of erectile tissue. Injecting
prostaglandin, a hormone-like stimulator produced in the body, induces
erection. Ultrasound is then used to see vascular dilation and measure
penile blood pressure. Measurements are compared to those taken when the
penis is flaccid.
Penile nerves function
Tests such as the bulbocavernosus reflex test are used to determine if
there is sufficient nerve sensation in the penis. The physician squeezes
the glans (head) of the penis, which immediately causes the anus to contract
if nerve function is normal. A physician measures the latency between
squeeze and contraction by observing the anal sphincter or by feeling
it with a gloved finger inserted past the anus. Specific nerve tests are
used in patients with suspected nerve damage as a result of diabetes or
nerve disease.
Nocturnal penile tumescence (NPT)
It is normal for a man to have five to six erections during sleep, especially
during rapid eye movement (REM). Their absence may indicate a problem
with nerve function or blood supply in the penis. There are two methods
for measuring changes in penile rigidity and circumference during nocturnal
erection: snap gauge and strain gauge. (It should be noted that a significant
proportion of men who have no sexual dysfunction nonetheless do not have
regular nocturnal erections. Thus presence of NPT tends to signify physically
functional systems, but absence of NPT may be ambiguous and not rule out
either cause.)
Penile biothesiometry
This test uses electromagnetic vibration to evaluate sensitivity and nerve
function in the glans and shaft of the penis. A decreased perception of
vibration may indicate nerve damage in the pelvic area, which can lead
to impotence.
Penile Angiogram
Invasive test - allows visualization of the circulation in the penis and
is used during the repair of a priapism.
Dynamic Infusion Cavernosometry
(Abbreviated DICC) technique in which fluid is pumped into the penis at
a known rate and pressure. It gives a measurement of the vascular pressure
in the corpus cavernosum during an erection. To do this test, a vasodilator
like prostaglandin E-1 is injected to measure the rate of infusion required
to get a rigid erection and to help find how severe the venous leak is.
Corpus Cavernosometry
Cavernosography measurement of the vascular pressure in the corpus cavernosum.
Saline is infused under pressure into the corpus cavernosum with a butterfly
needle, and the flow rate needed to maintain an erection indicates the
degree of venous leakage. The leaking veins responsible may be visualised
by infusing a mixture of saline and x ray contrast medium and performing
a cavernosogram.
Digital Subtraction Angiography
In DSA, the images are acquired digitally. The computer creates a mask
from lower-contrast x-rays of the same area and digitally isolates the
blood vessels (this is done manually through darkroom masking with traditional
angiography).
Magnetic
resonance angiography (MRA)
This is similar to magnetic resonance imaging. Magnetic resonance angiography
uses magnetic fields and radio waves to provide detailed images of the
blood vessels. Doctors may inject a "contrast agent" into the
patient's bloodstream that causes vascular tissues to stand out against
other tissues. The contrast agent provides for enhanced information regarding
blood supply and vascular anomalies. Aside from the IV used to introduce
the contrast material into the bloodstream, magnetic resonance angiography
is noninvasive and painless.
Treatment
Treatment depends on the cause. Testosterone supplements may be used for
cases due to hormonal deficiency. However, the cause is more usually lack
of adequate penile blood supply as a result of damage to inner walls of
blood vessels. This damage is more frequent in older men, and often associated
with disease, in particular diabetes.
Treatments
(with the exception of testosterone supplementation, where effective)
work on a temporary basis: they enable an erection to be attained and
maintained long enough for intercourse, but do not permanently improve
the underlying condition. There are different treatments available:
Oral treatment
3 different tablets are currently available from the doctor and these
work when there is sexual stimulation. Depending on the treatment, it
will need to be taken 20 minutes to 1 hour before sex and the period of
time over which it works can vary between 3 hours and up to 36 hours.
Alprostadil
This can be injected into the penis or inserted using a special applicator
- usually just before sexual intercourse.
BEFAR
Currently, only commercially available in the Far East, Befar® has
shown a clinical efficacy of up to 83% in patients with varying degrees
of ED. (6) The cream itself has an onset action of 10-15 minutes and can
continue on past 4-hours, (Figure 2) and is favorably comparable to the
efficacy of the injectable alprostadil. (3, 19)
Due to Befars
direct application method (i.e. unlike Viagra®, Befars actions
are limited to the area of its application), the side effects induced
by the application have to date been limited to transient warm and burning
sensations.
Vacuum
pumps
These work by drawing blood into the penis and are also used just before
sexual intercourse.
Hormone
treatment
It is rare, but some men receive hormones for their erection problem.
This does depend on the cause of the problem as well as other factors.
Surgery
Often, as a last resort if other treatments have failed, the most common
procedure is prosthetic implants which involves the insertion of artificial
rods into the penis.
Counselling
Counselling is often a consideration, both where a psychological cause
is suspected or must be ruled out, or to assist in management of any distress.
ED can in
many cases be treated by drugs taken orally, injected, or as penile suppositories.
These drugs increase the efficacy of NO, which dilates the blood vessels
of corpora cavernosa. When oral drugs or suppositories fail, injections
into the erectile tissue of the penile shaft are extremely effective but
occasionally cause priapism. When pharmacological methods fail, a purpose-designed
external vacuum pump can be used to attain erection, with a separate compression
ring fitted to the penis to maintain it. These pumps should be distinguished
from other "penis pumps" (supplied without compression rings)
which, rather than being used for temporary treatment of impotence, are
claimed to increase penis length if used frequently, or vibrate as an
aid to masturbation.
More drastically,
inflatable or rigid penile implants may be fitted surgically. Implants
are irreversible and costly.
All these
mechanical methods are based on simple principles of hydraulics and mechanics
and are quite reliable, but have their disadvantages.
In a few
cases there is a vascular problem which can be treated surgically.
Uncontroversial treatments
PDE5 Inhibitors
The cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases constitute a group of enzymes
that catalyse the hydrolysis of the cyclic nucleotides cyclic AMP and
cyclic GMP. They exist in different molecular forms and are unevenly distributed
throughout the body. These multiple forms or subtypes of phosphodiesterase
were initially isolated from rat brain by Uzunov and Weiss in 1972 and
were soon afterwards shown to be selectively inhibited by a variety of
drugs in brain and other tissues. The potential for selective phosphodisterase
inhibitors to be used as therapeutic agents was predicted as early as
1977 by Weiss and Hait. This prediction has now come to pass in a variety
of fields, one of which is in the pharmacological treatment of erectile
dysfunction.
One of the forms of phophodiesterase is termed PDE5. The prescription
PDE5 inhibitors sildenafil (Viagra®), vardenafil (Levitra®) and
tadalafil (Cialis®) are prescription drugs which are taken orally.
They work by blocking the action of PDE5, which causes cGMP to degrade.
CGMP specific phosphodiesterase type 5 causes the smooth muscle of the
arteries in the penis to relax, allowing the corpus cavernosum to fill
with blood.
(Specific
devices are mentioned for information only; mention should not be taken
as endorsement).
Dopamine
Receptor Agonist
Inflatable implant
Rigid implant
Surgical treatment of certain cases
Controversial
and unapproved treatments
Naltrexone
Drug used for treating drug addicts can have some success in patients
with inhibited sexual desire.
Bremelanotide
The experimental drug bremelanotide (formerly PT-141) does not act on
the vascular system like the former compounds but allegedly increases
sexual desire and drive in males as well as females. It is applied as
a nasal spray. Bremelanotide allegedly works by activating melanocortin
receptors in the brain. It is currently in Phase IIb trials.
Melanotan II
Like bremelanotide the experimental drug Melanotan II does not act on
the vascular system either but increases libido. Melanotan II works by
activating melanocortin receptors in the brain.
hMaxi-K
hMaxi-K is a form of gene therapy using a plasmid vector that expresses
the hSlo gene, that encodes the alpha-subunit of the Maxi-K channel. It
has undergone phase I safety trials.
Ginseng
A double-blind study appears to show evidence that ginseng is better than
placebo:see the ginseng article for more details.
Enzyte
Enzyte is a product that has been advertised by saturation coverage on
television channels such as CourtTV. However, the Center for Science in
the Public Interest (CSPI) has filed a complaint with the Federal Trade
Commission (FTC) about Enzyte for deceptive advertising. It is manufactured
by Berkeley Nutritionals, which is alleged to be the subject of an investigation
by the Attorney General of Ohio and the defendant in class-action lawsuits.
Enzyte is a supplement that claims to increase the male libido or frequency
of erections of the penis. Commercials for Enzyte are shown regularly
on television. These commercials feature a man named Bob who never stops
smiling, apparently because he had taken Enzyte and improved the size
of his sex organs. The commercials are riddled with symbolic phallic imagery,
e.g. golf clubs, remarkably tall glasses of iced tea, and a hose spraying
barely a trickle of water (carried by someone who doesn't use Enzyte).
The effectiveness of Enzyte is in dispute. Some medical professionals
in fact advise against taking Enzyte, saying that it can lead to damage.
The Center for Science in the Public Interest have urged the Federal Trade
Commission to disallow further television advertising for Enzyte due to
a lack of proper studies supporting claims. Enzyte maker Berkeley Premium
Nutraceuticals, Inc., is currently under a class action lawsuit for false
advertising.
Enzyte is said to contain: Tribulus terrestris; Yohimbe Extract; Niacin;
Epimedium; Avena sativa; zinc oxide; maca; Muira Pauma; Ginkgo biloba;
L-Arginine; Saw Palmetto. Other ingredients: gelatin, rice bran, oat fiber,
magnesium stearate, silicon dioxide.
Herbal and other alternative treatments
These are generally ineffective when tested blind, but may be useful for
their psychological (placebo) effect: if a good result is expected, any
highly praised, and often expensive, treatment can be effective. Reputable
drugs can also benefit from the same effect. This is especially useful
if blindfolded, as it helps to clear the mind of anxiety issues.
Prelox
Prelox is a Proprietary mix/combination of naturally occurring ingredients,
L-arginine aspartate and Pycnogenol. In double blind tests carried out
by Dr. Steven Lamm at New York University School of Medicine, 81.1% of
men overall judged Prelox to be effective in improving their ability to
engage in sexual activity. Whilst the supplements should be taken daily,
the manufacturers claim that it brings the spontaneity back into ones'
love life; unlike other products which must be remembered to be taken
a fixed time before sexual activity.
Other treatment
methods
Zinc
Zinc is known to help prevent the conversion of testosterone to estradiol,
and testosterone is essential for proper erectile function and the synthesis
of sperm (testosterone deficiency is a primary contributor in many cases
of erectile dysfunction). Moreover, zinc levels have been found to be
significantly reduced in both chronic bacterial prostatitis (CBP) and
non-bacterial prostatitis (NBP). Many doctors and nutritionalists recommend
zinc for prostate or erectile problems.
Zinc is best
taken in lozenge form, as in tablet form the zinc is difficult to absorb,
and can irritate the stomach lining.
History
The earliest attempts at treating erectile dysfunction date back to Muslim
physicians and pharmacists in the medieval Islamic world. They were the
first to prescribe medication for the treatment of this problem, and they
developed several methods of therapy for this issue, including a single-drug
therapy method where a drug was prescribed and a "combination method
of either a drug or food." Most of these drugs were oral medication,
though a few patients were also treated through topical and transurethral
means. Erectile dysfunctions were being treated with tested drugs in the
Islamic world since the 9th century until the 16th century by a number
of Muslim physicians and pharmacists, including Muhammad ibn Zakariya
Razi, Thabit bin Qurra, Ibn Al-Jazzar, Avicenna (The Canon of Medicine),
Averroes, Ibn al-Baitar, and Ibn al-Nafis (The Comprehensive Book on Medicine).
Dr. John
R. Brinkley initiated a boom in male impotence cures in the US in the
1920s and 1930s. His radio programs recommended expensive goat gland implants
and "mercurochrome" injections as the path to restored male
virility, including operations by surgeon Serge Voronoff. After the Kansas
State Medical Board revoked his medical license and the Federal Radio
Commission refused to renew his radio license (both in 1930), Brinkley
moved his operations just over the Texas border to Mexico where he opened
a medical clinic and broadcast advertisements into the US from a border
blaster radio station.
Surgeons
began providing patients with inflatable penile implants in the 1970s.
Modern drug
therapy for ED made a significant advance in 1983 when British physiologist
Giles Brindley, Ph.D. dropped his trousers and demonstrated to a shocked
American Urological Association audience his phentolamine-induced erection.
The drug Brindley injected into his penis was a non-specific vasodilator,
an alpha-blocking agent, and the mechanism of action was clearly corporal
smooth muscle relaxation. The effect that Brindley discovered established
the fundamentals for the later development of specific, safe, orally-effective
drug therapies.
This page
was last modified 02.20, 10 Febuary 2008.