WELCOME TO JOHNS HOPKINS HEALTH ALERTS!

This free public service from Johns Hopkins Medicine helps keep you up to date on the latest breakthroughs for the most common medical conditions which prevent healthy aging. Browse all the articles via the Health Alert Topics navigation bar on the right, or read the headlines below.


Get the latest news sent straight to your Inbox. Register now for your FREE Johns Hopkins Health Alerts. Check the boxes below for all the topics you are interested in, enter your email address, and click "Send." It's fast, easy, and FREE. Benefits of Being A Registered User..

Enter your email here: (Example: yourname@domain.com)
Please send my alerts as:

We value your privacy and will never rent your email address.Already a Member? Manage your Health Alerts


Erectile Dysfunction (Impotence)

 


Erectile Dysfunction: Symptoms and Remedies

 

Erectile Dysfunction (Impotence)

What Is Erectile Dysfunction?

 

 

Erectile dysfunction, commonly known as impotence, is the inability to achieve or maintain an erection adequate for satisfactory sexual performance. It may occur at any age but becomes increasingly frequent as men grow older.

The mechanisms for erection are fairly complex: A sensory stimulus triggers the brain to send nerve impulses down through the spinal cord. These signals trigger the release of a chemical messenger that causes the vessels supplying blood to the penis to dilate. The rod-shaped spongy tissues (corpora cavernosa) in the penis then fill with blood and expand, pressing against the veins that normally allow blood to drain from the penis, thus producing an erection. Interference with any part of this process—whether psychological or physiological—may cause erectile dysfunction.

Although an occasional inability to maintain an erection is common and not a sign of a chronic problem, a doctor should be consulted if erectile dysfunction persists. Treatment depends upon the underlying cause of erectile dysfunction.

Symptoms of Erectile Dysfunction

 

  • Inability to achieve or maintain an erection sufficient for satisfactory sexual performance.

 

What Causes Erectile Dysfunction?

 

  • Emotional and psychological difficulties such as guilt or anxiety (especially performance anxiety, in which fear of not having an erection becomes so distracting that it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy).

     

  • Conditions that affect the brain and decrease the libido (sex drive), including depression or schizophrenia; use of drugs that act on the central nervous system (sedatives, antidepressants, some antihypertensives, antipsychotics, and alcohol); and chronic illnesses such as heart, lung, kidney, or liver disease, and certain types of cancer.

     

  • Hormonal disturbances that decrease the libido, including diminished testosterone levels, elevated prolactin (due to a pituitary tumor) and hyper- or hypothyroidism.

     

  • Brain disorders (that do not affect libido but have neurological consequences that affect sexual functioning), including brain tumor and stroke.

     

  • Spinal cord disorders, such as multiple sclerosis or spinal cord trauma.

     

  • Damage to the peripheral nerves due to diabetes mellitus or pelvic surgery for disorders such as prostate cancer or rectal cancer.

     

  • Medications that can sometimes cause sexual dysfunction, including anticholinergics, antihistamines, beta-blockers (and other kinds of antihypertensives), and long-term use of nicotine.

     

  • Peripheral vascular disease (impaired blood flow to the extremities and the penis).

     

  • Fatigue.

     

  • Advancing age.

 

Prevention of Erectile Dysfunction

 

  • Have no more than two alcoholic beverages a day.

     

  • Don’t smoke.

     

  • Talk to a therapist about improving communication with your sexual partner.

 

Diagnosis of Erectile Dysfunction

 

  • Patient history and physical examination are required.

     

  • Blood may be taken to measure testosterone, prolactin, and thyroid hormones.

     

  • Psychological causes may be identified by ruling out a physiological cause. A band of stamps or perforated tape is placed around the penis before sleep. An erection during the night will break the perforations, demonstrating that there is no organic cause for the erectile dysfunction.

     

  • The drug alprostadil may be injected into the penis to test for vascular problems.

 

How To Treat Erectile Dysfunction

 

  • Avoid nicotine, alcohol, and other drugs.

     

  • Your doctor may change your prescriptions if a medication has caused erectile dysfunction.

     

  • Psychological counseling may be recommended when erectile dysfunction has an emotional or psychological cause.

     

  • Testosterone injections or skin patches are given if blood testosterone levels are low.

     

  • Hyperthyroidism or hypothyroidism is treated if necessary.

     

  • Bromocriptine therapy is given to correct elevated prolactin levels.

     

  • Three oral medications are currently available for treating erectile dysfunction: Viagra (sildenafil), Levitra (vardenafil), and Cialis (tadalafil). All three drugs treat erectile dysfunction by permitting blood to flow into the penis during sexual stimulation—the drugs do not produce erections in the absence of sexual stimulation. Viagra and Levitra improve erections for about four hours; Cialis is effective for 24 to 36 hours. Side effects of the three drugs are slightly different. The drugs are not recommended for men who take nitrate-containing medication (such as nitroglycerin) or men who have recently had a stroke, heart attack, of life-threatening arrhythmia.

     

  • A special vacuum device may be used to produce an erection. Air is pumped out of a plastic tube placed securely over the penis, and the resulting vacuum pulls blood into the corpora cavernosa within a few minutes. The device is removed and a rubber band is placed at the base of the penis to maintain the erection.

     

  • Self-administered injections of alprostadil, a vasodilator drug, dilate the blood vessels in the penis to produce an erection. Your doctor will instruct you on the correct injection technique.

     

  • Surgical implants for the penis are available. In one procedure, an inflatable device with a small fluid reservoir is inserted. In another, flexible rods are implanted that can be either bent upward to produce an erection or tucked close to the body.

     

  • In rare cases of erectile dysfunction, your doctor may advise vascular surgery to improve blood flow to the penis.

 

When To Call A Doctor

 

  • Call a doctor if you experience a persistent inability to achieve or maintain an erection.

 

For more information on erectile dysfunction, click on this link -- Johns Hopkins Health Alerts: Prostate Disease

Notify Me

Would you like us to inform you when we post new Prostate Disorders Health Alerts?

Customer Service

Registered Users Log-in:

Forgot Password?

Become a Registered User!
It's fast and FREE!
The Benefits of Being a Registered User

Johns Hopkins
Symptoms and Remedies


What is this?

XML



The Johns Hopkins Hospital Ranked #1 in the Nation in Five Specialties by U.S. News and World Report.



Number One of America's Best Hospitals 2012-2013: Johns Hopkins

Please visit here for more information about Johns Hopkins Patient Services