1 / 41

Erectile Dysfunction

Erectile Dysfunction. BY Ahmed Mahmoud Riad. Overview. Definition Anatomy and Physiology History Examination Investigations Treatment. Definition of ED. Persistent inability to attain and maintain a penile erection adequate for satisfactory sexual performance.

josefc
Télécharger la présentation

Erectile Dysfunction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Erectile Dysfunction BY Ahmed Mahmoud Riad

  2. Overview • Definition • Anatomy and Physiology • History • Examination • Investigations • Treatment

  3. Definition of ED • Persistent inability to attain and maintain a penile erection adequate for satisfactory sexual performance. • It affects more than 150 million men all the world.

  4. Anatomy and Physiology of erection • Sexual stimulation triggers a cascade of events. • Erection is neurovascular phenomena combining neurotransmission and vascular biologic responses. • Release of neurotransmitters that result in smooth muscle relaxation in both penile erectile tissue and the penile arterial walls • This transforms the penile vasculature and erectile tissues from contracted, minimally perfused state to relaxed engorged state.

  5. Anatomy and Physiology of erection Reproduced from Carson C, Holmes S, Kirby R. Fast Facts- Erectile Dysfunction. Oxford: Health Press Limited; 2002: 8

  6. Anatomy and Physiology of erection • The limbic system, part of cerebral cortex from which stimulation can elicit erection. • Medial preoptic area and paraventricular nucleus of hypothalamus are high integration centers for sexual drive and erection. • Parasympathetic nerves S2-4 mediate erection • Sympathetic nerves T11-L2 control ejaculation and detumescence. • Somatic nerves S2-S4 mediate sensation and motor to ischiocavernosus and bulbocavernosus muscles.

  7. Smooth muscle relaxation • Nitric oxide diffuses into cavernosal smooth muscle cells, activates Guanylate cyclase converts guanosine triphosphate to cGMP resulting in smooth muscle relaxation. Effect of cGMP stopped by Phosphodiesterase type 5 which exists primarily in corpora cavernosa.

  8. Veno-occlusive Mechanism Reproduced from Carson C,Holmes S,Kirby R. Fast Facts-Erectile Dysfunction. Oxford: Health Press Limited; 2002 :12

  9. History • Detailed description of problem, is it ED? • Causative factors • Sexual desire/libido • Ejaculatory disorders • Impact on quality of life and on relationship • Expectations of treatment

  10. Clues differentiating psychogenic from organic causes • Psychogenic • Sudden onset • Situational • Normal waking and nocturnal erections • Normal erection with masturbation • Relationship problems • Life event • Anxiety, fear, depression • Organic • Gradual onset • All situations • Reduced or absent waking and nocturnal erections • No erection with masturbation • Penile pain

  11. Relationship issues • Current relationship status • Length of relationship • Previous sexual partners and relationships • Partner issues e.g. menopause/pain/cancer

  12. History • Medical • Surgical • Psychiatric • Medication • Smoking • Alcohol • Recreational drug use

  13. Arteriogenic Cause of ED • Hypertension • Smoking • Diabetes • Hyperlipidaemia • Peripheral vascular disease • Blunt perineal or pelvic trauma • Pelvic irradiation

  14. Neurogenic causes of ED • Lesions of medial preoptic nucleus, paraventicular nucleus, hippocampus • Spinal trauma • Myelodisplasia (spina bifida) • Pelvic surgery/radiotherapy • Multiple sclerosis • Intervertebral disc lesion • Peripheral neuropathies • Alcohol • Diabetes • HIV

  15. Psychogenic and Psychiatric causes • Anxiety • Loss of attraction to partner • Relationship difficulties • Stress • Depression

  16. Psychogenic ED Reproduced from Carson C,Holmes S,Kirby R. Fast Facts-Erectile Dysfunction. Oxford: Health Press Limited; 2002 : 33

  17. Endocrine causes of ED • Hypogonadism • Low testosterone • Raised SHBG • Raised Prolactin • Thyroid disease

  18. Drugs associated with ED • Antihypertensives • Thiazides • B blockers • Centrally acting drugs • Antidepressants • Tricyclics • MAO inhibitors • SSRI • Anticholinergics • Atropine • Antipsychotics • Phenothiazines • Anxiolytics • Benzodiazepines • Psychotropic drugs • Alcohol • Opiates • Amphetamines • Cocaine

  19. Examination • Blood pressure • Peripheral pulses • Testes size and consistency • Secondary sexual characteristics • Penis for Peyronie’s plaques

  20. ED and Coronary Artery Disease • Generalised atherosclerosis • Penile arteries smaller than coronary arteries • ED pre-dates coronary artery disease • Man with ED and no cardiac symptoms is a cardiac patient until proven otherwise

  21. Investigations • Fasting glucose and lipids • Morning testosterone and SHBG • If testosterone is low or borderline repeat with Prolactin, FSH and LH • Thyroid function

  22. Specialised Investigations • Vascular studies • Young patients with primary ED • History of trauma e.g. penile fracture • Patients unresponsive to medical therapies

  23. Treatment of ED General Measures • Smoking cessation • Reduce alcohol • Weight loss • Exercise

  24. Endocrine Disorders • Hypogonadism • Hyperthyroidism • Hyperprolactinaemia • Endocrinology referral

  25. Psychosexual therapy • Even if cause of ED is physical the patient will develop psychosexual issues • Performance anxiety • Sensate focus exercises • Relationship counselling

  26. Drugs for ED • Oral agents • Centrally acting dopamine-receptor agonist Apomorphine (discontinued in UK) • Phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitors • Intra-cavernosal • Prostaglandin E1 Alprostadil • Intra-urethral • Alprostadil

  27. PDE5 inhibitors • Sildenafil (Viagra) 25mg, 50mg, 100mg • 1 hour before sexual activity • 4-6 hour window • Absorption delayed by fatty meal • Tadalafil (Cialis) 10mg, 20mg • 30 minutes before sexual activity • 36 hour window • Absorption not affected by food • Tadalafil (Cialis) 5mg • daily • Vardenafil (Levitra) 5mg, 10mg, 20mg • 30-60 minutes before sexual activity • 4-6 hour window • Absorption delayed by fatty meal

  28. PDE5 Physiology Reproduced from Carson C,Holmes S,Kirby R. Fast Facts-Erectile Dysfunction. Oxford: Health Press Limited; 2002 : 40

  29. PDE5 Inhibitors Side Effects • Facial flushing • Headache • Nasal congestion • Dizziness • Dyspepsia • Visual disturbance (blue halo) • Priapism • Non-arteritic anterior ischaemic optic neuropathy

  30. PDE5 Contraindications • Recent cardiovascular event • Nitrates • Hypotension • Anatomical deformity • Angulation, cavernosal fibrosis, Peyronie’s • Predisposition to prolonged erection • Sickle cell disease • Multiple myeloma • Leukaemia

  31. PDE5 Drug Interactions • Nitrates • Glyceryl trinitrate, isosorbide mono or dinitrate • Chest pain after taking Sildenafil/Vardenafil no nitrates 24 hours, Tadalafil no nitrates 48 hours • Recreational amyl nitrate (Poppers) • Cytochrome P450 inhibitors • Protease inhibitors especially Ritonavir use very small dose • Cimetidine, Ketoconazole, Erythromycin • Alpha blockers

  32. Intracavernosal Injections • Alprostadil (Caverject, Viridal) 5-40 mcg • Independent of intact nervous system • Manual dexterity, adequate vision, training • Contraindicated: bleeding disorders, sickle cell anaemia, multiple myeloma, leukaemia • Side effects: penoscrotal pain, haematoma, fibrosis at injection sites, priapism • Papaverine, Phentolamine, Aviptadil (vaso-intestinal peptide) been used sole or with Alprostadil

  33. Intracavernosal Injections Reproduced from Carson C,Holmes S,Kirby R. Fast Facts-Erectile Dysfunction. Oxford: Health Press Limited; 2002 : 53

  34. Intraurethral • Alprostadil (Muse) 125mg, 250mg, 500mg,1g • Pellet inserted with applicator • Massage penis to aid absorption • Side effects: Penile pain, dizziness, priapism rare

  35. Intraurethral Alprostadil Reproduced from Carson C,Holmes S,Kirby R. Fast Facts-Erectile Dysfunction. Oxford: Health Press Limited; 2002 : 55

  36. Vacuum Devices • Blood trapped in intracorporal and extracorporal compartments of penis • Constricting ring at base of penis • Cyanosis, oedema, cold • Pivots at base below ring • Maximum time 30 minutes

  37. Vacuum devices Reproduced from Carson C,Holmes S,Kirby R. Fast Facts-Erectile Dysfunction. Oxford: Health Press Limited; 2002 : 61

  38. Penile Prostheses • Semi-rigid rods • 2 piece inflatable prosthesis • 3 piece inflatable prosthesis with abdominal reservoir • Risks • Infection • Destroys corpora cavernosa • Erosion and extrusion • Mechanical failure

  39. Penile Prosthesis Reproduced from Carson C,Holmes S,Kirby R. Fast Facts-Erectile Dysfunction. Oxford: Health Press Limited; 2002 : 66

  40. NHS Prescription for ED • Diabetes • Multiple sclerosis • Parkinson’s Disease • Poliomyelitis • Prostate cancer • Prostatectomy incl TRP • Radical pelvic surgery • Severe pelvic injury • Renal failure • On dialysis • Transplant • Single gene neurological disease • Spinal cord injury • Spina bifida • Receiving NHS Rx 14/9/1998 • Severe distress

  41. Conclusions • ED is a common problem • Impact on patient and partner/s • Overlap of psychological and physical • May be initial presentation of diabetes or coronary artery disease • Good range of safe and effective therapies • If YOU don’t ask your patient may be too embarrassed to tell you

More Related