Aetiology and Management of Male Erectile Dysfunction and Female Sexual Dysfunction in Patients with Cardiovascular Disease

被引:0
|
作者
Stephen L. Archer
Ferrante S. Gragasin
Linda Webster
Derek Bochinski
Evangelos D. Michelakis
机构
[1] University of Alberta,Department of Medicine (Cardiology), Department of Physiology and the Vascular Biology Group
[2] University of Alberta,Department of Medicine (Cardiology) and the Vascular Biology Group
[3] University of Alberta,Department of Surgery, Division of Urology
[4] University of Alberta,Cardiology Division, Department of Medicine
来源
Drugs & Aging | 2005年 / 22卷
关键词
Erectile Dysfunction; PDE5 Inhibitor; Erectile Function; Papaverine; Tadalafil;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The historical basis for understanding erectile function as a neurovascular phenomenon and the advance from fanciful to effective treatment of erectile dysfunction (ED) are reviewed, with emphasis on patients with cardiovascular disease (CVD). ED occurs in 60% of CVD patients by 40 years of age. Male ED and female sexual dysfunction (FSD) diminish quality of life and often warn of occult CVD. ED is often unrecognised but is readily diagnosed during a 5-minute interview using a truncated International Index of Erectile Function questionnaire. Erection of the penis and clitoral engorgement result from local, arousal-induced release of neuronal and endothelial-derived nitric oxide (NO). Arterial vasodilatation and relaxation of cavernosal smooth muscle cells cause arterial blood to flood trabecular spaces, compressing venous drainage, resulting in tumescence. Cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP)-induced activation of protein kinase G mediates the effects of NO by enhancing calcium sequestration and activating large-conductance, calcium-sensitive K+ channels. Future treatment strategies will likely enhance these pathways. Phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors (sildenafil, tadalafil and vardenafil) increase cGMP levels in erectile tissue. These agents are effective in 80% of CVD patients with ED and can be used safely, even in the presence of stable coronary disease or congestive heart failure, provided nitrates are avoided and patients do not have hypotension, severe aortic stenosis or evocable myocardial ischaemia. Second-line therapies (vacuum constrictor device and transurethral or intracavernosal prostaglandin E1) can also be used in CVD patients. Treatment of FSD and its relationship to CVD are less well established, but similarities to ED exist. ED can be prevented by reduction of CVD risk factors, exercise, weight loss and abstinence from smoking.
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页码:823 / 844
页数:21
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