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Impotence is
a consistent inability to sustain an erection sufficient for sexual
intercourse. Medical professionals often use the term "erectile
dysfunction" to describe this disorder and to differentiate it from other
problems that interfere with sexual intercourse, such as lack of sexual
desire and problems with ejaculation and orgasm. This fact sheet focuses
on impotence defined as erectile dysfunction.
Impotence
can be a total inability to achieve erection, an inconsistent ability to
do so, or a tendency to sustain only brief erections. These variations
make defining impotence and estimating its incidence difficult. Experts
believe impotence affects between 10 and 15 million American men. In 1985,
the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey counted 525,000 doctor-office
visits for erectile dysfunction.
Impotence
usually has a physical cause, such as disease, injury, or drug
side-effects. Any disorder that impairs blood flow in the penis has the
potential to cause impotence. Incidence rises with age: about 5 percent of
men at the age of 40 and between 15 and 25 percent of men at the age of 65
experience impotence. Yet, it is not an inevitable part of aging.
Impotence is
treatable in all age groups, and awareness of this fact has been growing.
More men have been seeking help and returning to near-normal sexual
activity because of improved, successful treatments for impotence.
Urologists, who specialize in problems of the urinary tract, have
traditionally treated impotence--especially complications of impotence.
The penis
contains two chambers, called the corpora cavernosa, which run the
length of the organ (see figure 1). A spongy tissue fills the chambers.
The corpora cavernosa are surrounded by a membrane, called the
tunica albuginea. The spongy tissue contains smooth muscles, fibrous
tissues, spaces, veins, and arteries. The urethra, which is the channel
for urine and ejaculate, runs along the underside of the corpora
cavernosa
Erection
begins with sensory and mental stimulation. Impulses from the brain and
local nerves cause the muscles of the corpora cavernosa to relax,
allowing blood to flow in and fill the open spaces. The blood creates
pressure in the corpora cavernosa, making the penis expand. The
tunica albuginea helps to trap the blood in the corpora cavernosa,
thereby sustaining erection. Erection is reversed when muscles in the
penis contract, stopping the inflow of blood and opening outflow channels.
Since an
erection requires a sequence of events, impotence can occur when any of
the events is disrupted. The sequence includes nerve impulses in the
brain, spinal column, and area of the penis, and response in muscles,
fibrous tissues, veins, and arteries in and near the corpora cavernosa.
Damage to
arteries, smooth muscles, and fibrous tissues, often as a result of
disease, is the most common cause of impotence. Diseases--including
diabetes, kidney disease, chronic alcoholism, multiple sclerosis,
atherosclerosis, and vascular disease--account for about 70 percent of
cases of impotence. Between 35 and 50 percent of men with diabetes
experience impotence.
Surgery (for
example, prostate surgery) can injure nerves and arteries near the penis,
causing impotence. Injury to the penis, spinal cord, prostate, bladder,
and pelvis can lead to impotence by harming nerves, smooth muscles,
arteries, and fibrous tissues of the corpora cavernosa.
Also, many
common medicines produce impotence as a side effect. These include high
blood pressure drugs, antihistamines, antidepressants, tranquilizers,
appetite suppressants, and cimetidine (an ulcer drug).
Experts
believe that psychological factors cause 10 to 20 percent of cases of
impotence. These factors include stress, anxiety, guilt, depression, low
self-esteem, and fear of sexual failure. Such factors are broadly
associated with more than 80 percent of cases of impotence, usually as
secondary reactions to underlying physical causes.
Other
possible causes of impotence are smoking, which affects blood flow in
veins and arteries, and hormonal abnormalities, such as insufficient
testosterone.
Patient
History
Medical and
sexual histories help define the degree and nature of impotence. A medical
history can disclose diseases that lead to impotence. A simple recounting
of sexual activity might distinguish between problems with erection,
ejaculation, orgasm, or sexual desire.
A history of
using certain prescription drugs or illegal drugs can suggest a chemical
cause. Drug effects account for 25 percent of cases of impotence. Cutting
back on or substituting certain medications often can alleviate the
problem.
Physical
Examination
A physical
examination can give clues for systemic problems. For example, if the
penis does not respond as expected to certain touching, a problem in the
nervous system may be a cause. Abnormal secondary sex characteristics,
such as hair pattern, can point to hormonal problems, which would mean the
endocrine system is involved. A circulatory problem might be indicated by,
for example, an aneurysm in the abdomen. And unusual characteristics of
the penis itself could suggest the root of the impotence--for example,
bending of the penis during erection could be the result of Peyronie's
disease.
Laboratory
Tests
Several
laboratory tests can help diagnose impotence. Tests for systemic diseases
include blood counts, urinalysis, lipid profile, and measurements of
creatinine and liver enzymes. For cases of low sexual desire, measurement
of testosterone in the blood can yield information about problems with the
endocrine system.
Other Tests
Monitoring
erections that occur during sleep (nocturnal penile tumescence) can help
rule out certain psychological causes of impotence. Healthy men have
involuntary erections during sleep. If nocturnal erections do not occur,
then the cause of impotence is likely to be physical rather than
psychological. Tests of nocturnal erections are not completely reliable,
however. Scientists have not standardized such tests and have not
determined when they should be applied for best results.
Psychosocial Examination
A
psychosocial examination, using an interview and questionnaire, reveals
psychological factors. The man's sexual partner also may be interviewed to
determine expectations and perceptions encountered during sexual
intercourse.
Most
physicians suggest that treatments for impotence proceed along a path
moving from least invasive to most invasive. This means cutting back on
any harmful drugs is considered first. Psychotherapy and behavior
modifications are considered next, followed by vacuum devices, oral drugs,
locally injected drugs, and surgically implanted devices (and, in rare
cases, surgery involving veins or arteries).
Psychotherapy
Experts
often treat psychologically based impotence using techniques that decrease
anxiety associated with intercourse. The patient's partner can help apply
the techniques, which include gradual development of intimacy and
stimulation. Such techniques also can help relieve anxiety when physical
impotence is being treated.
Drug
Therapy
Drugs for
treating impotence can be taken orally, injected directly into the penis,
or inserted into the urethra at the tip of the penis. In March 1998, the
Food and Drug Administration approved sildenafil citrate (marketed as
Viagra), the first oral pill to treat impotence. Taken 1 hour before
sexual activity, sildenafil works by enhancing the effects of nitric
oxide, a chemical that relaxes smooth muscles in the penis during sexual
stimulation, allowing increased blood flow. While sildenafil improves the
response to sexual stimulation, it does not trigger an automatic erection
as injection drugs do. The recommended dos is 50 mg, and the physician may
adjust this dose to 100 mg or 25 mg, depending on the needs of the
patient. The drug should not be used more than once a day.
Oral
testosterone can reduce impotence in some men with low levels of natural
testosterone. Patients also have claimed effectiveness of other oral
drugs--including yohimbine hydrochloride, dopamine and serotonin agonists,
and trazodone--but no scientific studies have proved the effectiveness of
these drugs in relieving impotence. Some observed improvements following
their use may be examples of the placebo effect, that is, a change that
results simply from the patient's believing that an improvement will
occur.
Many men
gain potency by injecting drugs into the penis, causing it to become
engorged with blood. Drugs such as papaverine hydrochloride, phentolamine,
and alprostadil (marked as Caverject) widen blood vessels. These drugs may
create unwanted side effects, however, including persistent erection
(known as priapism) and scarring. Nitroglycerin, a muscle relaxant,
sometimes can enhance erection when rubbed on the surface of the penis.
A system for
inserting a pellet of alprostadil into the urethra is marketed as MUSE.
The system uses a pre-filled applicator to deliver the pellet about an
inch deep into the urethra at the tip of the penis. An erection will begin
within 8 to 10 minutes and may last 30 to 60 minutes. The most common side
effects of the preparation are aching in the penis, testicles, and area
between the penis and rectum; warmth or burning sensation in the urethra;
redness of the penis due to increased blood flow; and minor urethral
bleeding or spotting.
Research on
drugs for treating impotence is expanding rapidly. Patients should ask
their doctors about the latest advances.
Vacuum
Devices
Mechanical
vacuum devices cause erection by creating a partial vacuum around the
penis, which draws blood into the penis, engorging it and expanding it.
The devices have three components: a plastic cylinder, in which the penis
is placed; a pump, which draws air out of the cylinder; and an elastic
band, which is placed around the base of the penis, to maintain the
erection after the cylinder is removed and during intercourse by
preventing blood from flowing back into the body (see figure 2).
One
variation of the vacuum device involves a semirigid rubber sheath that is
placed on the penis and remains there after attaining erection and during
intercourse.
Surgery
Surgery
usually has one of three goals:
- to
implant a device that can cause the penis to become erect;
- to
reconstruct arteries to increase flow of blood to the penis;
- to block
off veins that allow blood to leak from the penile tissues.
Implanted
devices, known as prostheses, can restore erection in many men with
impotence. Possible problems with implants include mechanical breakdown
and infection. Mechanical problems have diminished in recent years because
of technological advances.
Malleable
implants usually consist of paired rods, which are inserted surgically
into the corpora cavernosa, the twin chambers running the length of
the penis. The user manually adjusts the position of the penis and,
therefore, the rods. Adjustment does not affect the width or length of the
penis.
Inflatable
implants consist of paired cylinders, which are surgically inserted inside
the penis and can be expanded using pressurized fluid (see figure 3).
Tubes connect the cylinders to a fluid reservoir and pump, which also are
surgically implanted. The patient inflates the cylinders by pressing on
the small pump, located under the skin in the scrotum. Inflatable implants
can expand the length and width of the penis somewhat. They also leave the
penis in a more natural state when not inflated.
Surgery to
repair arteries can reduce impotence caused by obstructions that block the
flow of blood to the penis. The best candidates for such surgery are young
men with discrete blockage of an artery because of an injury to the crotch
area or fracture of the pelvis. The procedure is less successful in older
men with widespread blockage.
Surgery to
veins that allow blood to leave the penis usually involves an opposite
procedure--
intentional blockage. Blocking off veins (ligation) can reduce the leakage
of blood that diminishes rigidity of the penis during erection. However,
experts have raised questions about this procedure's long-term
effectiveness.
Advances in
suppositories, injectable medications, implants, and vacuum devices have
expanded the options for men seeking treatment for impotence. These
advances also have helped increase the number of men seeking treatment.
An oral form
of the drug phentolamine may soon join sildenafil in the armamentarium of
noninvasive treatments for impotence. Other treatments in the experimental
stages include reconstruction surgery for damaged veins and arteries in
the penis. Whether or not this method proves to be safe and effective,
ongoing improvements in traditional methods should continue to create more
successful and widespread treatment of impotence.
- Impotence
is a consistent inability to sustain an erection sufficient for sexual
intercourse.
- Impotence
affects 10 to 15 million American men.
- Impotence
usually has a physical cause.
- Impotence
is treatable in all age groups.
-
Treatments include psychotherapy, drug therapy, vacuum devices, and
surgery.
Disclaimer
This information is not intended
to substitute for professional medical advice. Be
sure to contact your physician, pharmacist or other
health care provider for more information about this
medication.
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