This document discusses the etiology and evaluation of erectile dysfunction (ED). It begins with definitions of ED and classifications of organic vs psychogenic causes. It then covers the epidemiology, risk factors, and various etiologies of ED including vascular, neurological, hormonal, drug-induced, diabetes-related, and other causes. The document outlines the evaluation of ED, including sexual questionnaires, medical history, physical exam, lab tests, and specialized tests like vascular testing using duplex ultrasound, pharmacologic injection, and dynamic infusion cavernosometry and cavernosography. It provides details on techniques, indications, and interpretations for the various diagnostic tests used to evaluate patients with ED.
2. Moderators:
Professors:
Prof. Dr. G. Sivasankar, M.S., M.Ch.,
Prof. Dr. A. Senthilvel, M.S., M.Ch.,
Asst Professors:
Dr. J. Sivabalan, M.S., M.Ch.,
Dr. R. Bhargavi, M.S., M.Ch.,
Dr. S. Raju, M.S., M.Ch.,
Dr. K. Muthurathinam, M.S., M.Ch.,
Dr. D. Tamilselvan, M.S., M.Ch.,
Dr. K. Senthilkumar, M.S., M.Ch.
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai. 2
3. ERECTILE DYSFUNCTION
ED defined as the consistent or
recurrent inability to attain and/or
maintain penile erection sufficient for
sexual performance
3
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
4. HISTORY
Hippocrates -male impotence among the rich;
excessive horseback riding.
Aristotle -three branches of nerves carry spirit
and energy to penis & erection is produced by
influx of air .
Leonardo da Vinci - large amount of blood in
erect penis of hanged men , doubt on the
concept.
In 1585, Ambroise Paré - penile anatomy and
vascular event of erection .
4
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
5. EPIDEMIOLOGY
Mean probability of some degree of ED -52%
Incidence - 25.9 cases per 1000 man-years.
Annual incidence rates increased with each decade
(per 1000 man-years):
• 12.4 %cases in 40 to 49 years,
• 29.8 %cases in 50 to 59 years, and
• 46.4% cases in 60 to 69 years.
Massachusetts Male Aging Study (MMAS ) -men between ages of
40- 70 yrs , first surveyed 1987 - 1989 and resurveyed 1995 - 1997 .
5
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
6. RISK FACTORS
Heart disease
Hypertension
Diabetes
Chronic renal failure
Hepatic failure
Multiple Sclerosis
Severe depression
Other (vascular disease, low HDL, high
cholesterol)
Benet et al. Urol Clinic North Am. 1995; 151:54-61
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Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
8. PSYCHOGENIC
Persistent inability to achieve or maintain
erection satisfactory for sexual performance due
predominantly or exclusively to psychological or
interpersonal factors.
Anxiety
Self-reported depressive symptoms
Low degrees of self-esteem
Negative outlook on life
Self-reported emotional stress
8
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
9. NEUROGENIC
10% to 19% of ED is neurogenic , prevalence is
much high if iatrogenic & mixed ED included.
Parkinson's disease
Stroke
Encephalitis
Temporal lobe epilepsy
Tumors
Dementia
Alzheimer's disease
Shy-Drager syndrome
Spinal cord Trauma.
9
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
10. Iatrogenic impotence :
• Radical prostatectomy 43% to 100%
• Perineal prostatectomy for BPH 29%
• APR - 15% to 100%
Nerve-sparing radical prostatectomy
reduced the incidence from 100% to 30%-
50%
In Pelvic fracture, ED result of cavernous
nerve injury or vascular insufficiency or
both .
10
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
11. ENDOCRINOLOGIC
Men receiving long-term androgen ablation
therapy for prostate cancer reported poor libido
and ED .
Hyperprolactinemia- pituitary adenoma or drugs,
results in both reproductive and sexual
dysfunction.
hyperthyroidism- decreased libido
hypothyroidism- Hyperprolactinemia, decreased
testosterone
11
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
12. ARTERIOGENIC
Due to Atherosclerotic or traumatic
arterial occlusive disease
Risk factors HT, hyperlipidemia, cigarette
smoking, DM, blunt perineal or pelvic
trauma, and pelvic irradiation.
12
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
19. Diabetes mellitus
cause ED
Altered psychologic well being
Decreased androgen secretion,
altered peripheral nerve activity,
endothelial cell function,
smooth muscle contractility
19
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
20. CAD in ED
In men having symptomatic
coronary artery disease ( CAD ), ED
precedes 55 – 65% CAD by 3 – 4
years
20
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
22. Hypertension cause ED
Independent risk factor
IHD
Arterial biochemical and structural
changes
22
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
23. PRIMARY ED
Lifelong inability to initiate /maintain
erections, or both.
Begins with first sexual attempt .
Most cases due to psychologic factors,
Physical cause - maldevelopment of penis
or blood and nerve supply .
23
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
25. SEXUAL QUESTIONNAIRES
International Index of Erectile Function (IIEF) ,
Brief Male Sexual Function Inventory (BMSFI)
Dysfunction Inventory for Treatment Satisfaction
(EDITS) ,
Male Sexual Function Scale.
Major drawback is reliance on self-assessment.
25
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
26. SAQ’S
Formerly, questionnaires used to differentiate
psychogenic from nonpsychogenic ED.
SAQs greatest use in clinical trials.
Do not differentiate various causes of ED.
A good history, physical examination, and
proper lab studies still form the cornerstone
26
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
27. MEDICAL HISTORY
Evaluate role of underlying comorbidities.
Assess potential role of medication.
Past H/O: Prostatectomy, APR, Pelvic trauma.
Differentiate potential organic and psychogenic
causes .
27
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
28. Characteristic
Organic Psychogenic
Onset Gradual Acute
Circumstances Global Situational
Course Constant Varying
Noncoital erection Poor Rigid
Psychosexual problem Secondary Long history
Partner problem Secondary At onset
Anxiety and fear Secondary Primary
28
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
29. physical examination
Height , weight BMI , BP
Secondary sexual characteristics to rule out
hypogonadism
Thyroid evaluation
Cardiovascular system
• LL pulses
Abdominal
• Waist cricumference
Neurological system
• Penile Sensation, bulbocarvernosus reflex, LL neurology
Genital-urinary system
• Penile deformity, phimosis, Peyronie's plaques
• Testicular size, consistency and mass
• DRE: anal tone, prostate
29
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
30. LAB TESTS
Fasting Glucose, RFT, lipids & testosterone.
HORMONAL STUDY Optional :
.
( Prolactin, LH, FSH, Thyroid function.)
PSA measured >50 yrs age ,to R/O ca prostate, if
hormonal replacement planned.
30
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
31. EVALUATION OF COMPLEX PATIENT
Indications for specialized evaluation
• Failure of initial treatment
• Peyronie's disease
• Primary ED
• H/O pelvic/perineal trauma
• Vascular or neurosurgical intervention
• Complicated endocrinopathy
• Complicated psychiatric disorder
• Complex relationship problems
• Medicolegal concerns .
31
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
33. VASCULAR
Most commonly performed diagnostic procedure.
Intracavernous inj of vasodilator –
genital / Audiovisual sexual stimulation, and
assessment of erection by an observer.
It bypass neurologic & hormonal influences
evaluate vascular status of penis directly .
COMBINED INTRACAVERNOUS INJECTION
AND STIMULATION (CIS)
33
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
34. Trimix -0.3ml(papaverine ,phentolamine,
alprostadil)
27 to 29 gauge is inserted at the lateral base of
the penis directly into the corpus cavernosum
manual compression is applied to the injection
site for 5 minutes to prevent local hematoma
formation.
The assessment is done periodically afterwards to
rate rigidity
34
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
36. intracavernous injection test
A positive test is a rigid erectile response
(unable to bend the penis) that appears within
10 min after the intracavernous injection and
lasts for 30 min
This response indicates a functional and rule
out veno-occlusive dysfunction, although co-
exist with arterial insufficiency
Positive test shows that a patient will respond
to the intracavernous injection program
36
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
37. CIS
False-neg in 20% with borderline arterial inflow.
False-positive occur most commonly because of
pt anxiety, needle phobia, or inadequate dosage.
Pt should not leave until penis becomes flaccid
spontaneously or by injection of phenylephrine.
• 500 μg/mL, given 1 mL every 3 to 5 minutes
until detumescence.
37
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
39. Step 2
Per injection flaccid state:
PSV-10cm/sec
Cavernosal artery diameter-0.3-
10mm
39
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
40. Step 3 post injection
After 10min , usually multiple
measurement is done
PSV- >25-35 cm/sec
Cavernosal arterial diameter ->7mm
40
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
41. Step 4 Diastolic measurement
EDV - < 5cm/min
RI = PSV - EDV/PSV.
During tumescence until full rigidity, diastolic flow
is antegrade RI remains <1.
RI >0.9 associated with normal results during
DICC in 90% .
RI < 0.75 associated with venous leakage in
95%.
41
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
42. Dynamic Infusion Cavernosometry &
Cavernosography
4 phases
combined intracavernous injection and
stimulation
• Pharmacologic cavernosometry (infusing the penis
with heparinized saline whilst monitoring
the intracavernosmal pressure)
• Cavernosal artery systolic occlusion pressure
(CASOP) is found
• Pharmacologic cavernosography -infusing contrast
into the corporeal tissue and obtaining radiographic
images of the penis and perineum to see if there is
venous leakage
42
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
43. Normal:
• A gradient between
the CASOP and the
brachial artery
pressures of
<35mmHg
• an equal pressure
between the right
and the left
cavernous arteries
Venous leakage:
- Inability to attain systolic
pressure
- Large gradient between
CASOP & brachial
systolic pressure
- Rapid drop of
intracavernosal pressure
upon stopping of
infusion
43
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
44. CAVERNOSAL ARTERY FLOW
BRACHIAL SYSTOLIC AND
DIASTOLIC BP
(CASOP)-108 mmHg
INTRACAVERNOSAL
HEPARINIZED SALINE FLOW
44
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
45. Cavernosography
Indication:
1. evaluate venous problems in men with
ED
2. Investigation of priapism (high flow)
3. Assessment of penile fractures/injury
to assess cavernosal damage
4. Assessment of Peyronie’s disease
(rarely used)
Contraindication:
• Hx of contrast allergy 45
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
46. Carvernosography
Two 19–22 G butterfly needles inserted into
the corpora
60-100ml Omnipaque or urograffin infused
slowly to obtain penile pressure 90mmHg
If penis not erection , contrast leakage
Fluoroscopy: AP , Rt, Lt oblique view
Normal: no contrast visualized outside the 2
corpora cavernosa
Abnormal: Contrast leakage or significant
curvature
46
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
47. Advantage: more sensitive and
accurate compare to doppler USG for
venous leakage
Disadvantage:
• Invasive
• Can be painful
• Risk of infection
• Contrast related fibrosis within corpora
• Risk of priapism
47
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
48. PHARMACOLOGIC CAVERNOSOGRAPHY
After penile # communication
between CC & CS seen 27-year-old man with primary ED,
venous leakage from crura
48
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
49. NEUROLOGIC
Specialized test for neurologic ED unnecessary.
Nerve conduction velocity studies
Biothesiometry,
Bulbocavernosus EMG,
Corpus cavernosus EMG
All lack sensitivity & reliability.
Penile thermal sensory testing - promising tool
for diagnosis of neurogenic ED .
49
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
51. PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGIC
Nocturnal penile tumescence (NPT) monitoring
Stamp test :Ring of postage stamps placed
around the base of penis ,at night break.
Snap gauges:3 individual, differently colored
bands secured at base of penis , break under
progressive radial forces.
Sleep laboratory nocturnal penile tumescence
and rigidity (NPTR);
RigiScan
.
51
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
52. NPTR
INDICATIONS
• Suspected sleep disorder
• Obscure cause of ED
• No response to therapy
• Planned surgical treatment
• Legally sensitive case
• Measurement of drug effects in placebo-controlled trials
• Suspected psychogenic cause
Advantages - Freedom from psychologic influences,
Ability to detect sleep-related abnormalities.
Disadvantages of NPT evaluation –
Age dependent and costly,
Ideally done with RigiScan in a sleep center.
52
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
53. NPTR …
Devices measure
No of episodes, Tumescence , Maximal penile
rigidity, and Duration of N.E.
Electroencephalography, electro-oculography, and EMG,
with nasal air flow, and O2 saturation to document REM
sleep and hypoxia
Pt is awakened during maximal tumescence, erection is
photographed and axial rigidity measured at tip of penis.
Buckling resistance of 500 g is considered minimum for
vaginal penetration;
1.5 kg is considered complete rigidity.
53
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
54. RIGISCAN
First automated, portable NPTR recording.
Combines monitoring of radial rigidity, tumescence, no &
duration of erectile events with portable system -used at
home.
Collect data 3 separate nights for maximum of 10 hrs/night
Consist of two loops: one is placed at base of penis & other
at coronal sulcus. By constricting the loops, device records
penile tumescence & radial rigidity at penile base and tip.
.
54
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
55. RIGISCAN RESULT ANALYSIS…
Radial rigidity > 70% - non buckling
erection,
Rigidity of < 40% represents a flaccid
penis.
Normal NPTR : 4-5 erectile episodes / night
Mean duration > 30 mts
↑ in circumference of > 3 cm at base and > 2 cm at tip
Maximal rigidity above 70% at both base & tip.
55
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
57. TWO EPISODES OF WELL-
SUSTAINED, COMPLETELY
RIGID NOCTURNAL ERECTIONS
TWO EPISODES OF POORLY
SUSTAINED, POORLY RIGID
NOCTURNAL ERECTIONS
RigiScan
57
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.
58. “…Mankind can survive
earthquakes, and experience the
horrors of illness, yet of all the
tortures of the soul, the most
tormenting tragedy of all time is,
the tragedy of the bedroom.”
— Leo Tolstoy
THANK YOU
58
Dept of Urology, GRH and KMC,
Chennai.