Sexual function and dysfunction in men
Transcription
Sexual function and dysfunction in men
Georges A. de Boccard, M.D. Consultant Urologist F.E.B.U. Sexual function and dysfunction in men Training in Reproductive Health Research Geneva Foundation for Medical Education and Research Geneva March 15th, 2007. The physical Pathways of a Normal erection? After erotical stimulation And physical stimulation visual tactile genital 1. Anatomy and physiology of normal erection 2. Incidence of erectile dysfunctions 3. Causes of erectile dysfunctions 4. Diagnostic tools 5. Treatments Pituitary & gonadic physiology GnRH E(?) + - Hypothalamus Anterior pituitary LH Testostérone + T Testosterone behaviour prostate bones E(?) FSH + Testis Anatomy UrologyHealth.org Anatomical Drawings Anatomy UrologyHealth.org Anatomical Drawings Neurophysiology cavernous Nerves – Parasympathetic nitrergic – Sympathetic adrenergic control of the blood flow (rigidity- flaccidity) Pudendal Nerves – Sensitive (positive feed-back) – motors : contraction of perineal muscles (ischio- and bulbocavernous) Functional neuroanatomy of erection Cortex Thalamus Hypothalamus Limbic System Medulla Oblongata Autonomic nuclei in Reticular Formation Systemic effects Sympathetic Chain Ganglia T11-L2 Superior Hypogastric Plexus S2-S4 Pelvic Nerve Hypogastric Nerve Pelvic Plaxus Pudendal Nerve Cavernous Nerve Dorsal Nerve of the Penis P Hedlund Penile anatomy Vascularisation Anatomy of corpus cavernous Flaccidity Erection Erectile Physiology cGMP Ca++ NO NO - cGMP relaxation of the cavernous smooth muscle inducing erection 1. Anatomy and physiology of normal erection 2. Incidence of erectile dysfunction 3. Causes of erectile dysfunction 4. Diagnostic tools 5. Treatments Incidence of erectile dysfunction in Europe 60 48,3 % 50 (%) 40 30 20 26,7 % 15,6 % 12,8 % 10 1,7 % 4,6 % 0 l a t To 9 3 20 9 4 40 9 5 50 0 7 60 0 >7 S.I.M.G. Epidemiologic Study, 1997 1. Anatomy and physiology of normal erection 2. Incidence of erectile dysfunctions 3. Causes of erectile dysfunctions 4. Diagnostic tools 5. Treatments Causes of erectile dysfunctions 18% psychogenic 43% physical 57% 82% 39% mix Causes of erectile dysfunctions Hormonal disorders 6% Medical treatment 8% Vascular diseases 33% Drug addiction 7% Neurological affection 11% Radical surgery in the pelvis 10% Diabetes 25% Stief et. Al, Zeitgemäße Therapie der erektilen Dysfunktion, Springer Verlag Causes of erectile dysfunctions Role of the vascular endothelium Any condition that induces a lack of NO production from the vascular endothelium may be a cause of erectile dysfunction. Since NO secretion is centrally modulated (brain), any relational disturbance will negatively affect the corpus cavernous, The same way as a vascular or neurological disorder. Causes of erectile dysfunctions NO GTP 5’GMP Guanylate cyclase Ca2+ Ca2+ Ca2+ cGMP PK Ca2+ Ca2+ Ca2+ Ca2+ Muscle relaxation - erection Inhibitors PDE5 Hormones and aging Pituitary GH IGF-1 Somatopause LH / FSH E2 /T Menopause / Androclysis ACTH = DHEA Adrenopause Testosterone level (ng/ml) Day-night testosterone level 8 7 Age 25 y. 6 5 Age 71 y. 4 4 8 12 16 20 24 time Bremner et al, J Clin Endocrinol Metab 1983; 56: 1278 1. Anatomy and physiology of normal erection 2. Incidence of erectile dysfunctions 3. Causes of erectile dysfunctions 4. Diagnostic tools 5. Treatments Diagnostic tools Special investigations Duplex sonography with pharmacostimulation Intra cavernous injection test Lab. Blood and hormonal status Physical examination History History Onset, nature, duration Rigidity, shape of the penis External factors (psych. or prof. stress) Associated diseases Former therapies Expectations regarding the treatment. Physical examination General condition Blood pressure, pulsations External genitals Inflammatory diseases (teeth) DRE Neurological evaluation Lab tests Fasting glycaemia (HbA1c) Lipidic profile Blood formula Liver enzymes Hormones – Testosterone (free) – (PRL – TSH – T4) PSA – % free PSA urine Specific tests Duplex sonography +intracavernosal prostaglandin Nocturnal Penile tumescence test Vascular imaging Neurological testing Duplex sonography PGE1 injection Art.flow>30cm/s Venous leakage NPT REM sleep phases History Vascular radiology arteriography cavernosography Anxiety / fibrosis 1. Anatomy and physiology of normal erection 2. Incidence of erectile dysfunctions 3. Causes of erectile dysfunctions 4. Diagnostic tools 5. Treatments Hormonal treatment Testosterone injection Testosterone oral Testosterone transdermal testosterone enanthate Testosterone gel testosterone undecanoate PDE5 inhibitors Sildenafil Tadalafil H Vardenafil O CH 3 O N O CH3 CH3 HN N N N N N H H HCl C H3 O O S O N N O H3 C O Viagra Pfizer ® Cialis ® Lilly-Icos ® Levitra GSK-Bayer yohimbini Tadalafil (Cialis) H O N N HH N O O O CH3 PDE5 inhib. preferences 43% 40% 17% (34/86) (15/86) Levitra 20mg Viagra 100mg Cialis 20mg Sommer et al. (2003), ESSM, Istanbul MACA (lepidium Meyenii) Gonzales G. & al. 2002. Effect of Lepidium Meyenii (MACA) on sexual desire and its absent relationship with serum testosterone levels in adult healthy men. Andrology 34, 367-372. PDE5 inhibitors, what dosage? Occasional treatment – 1 tabl. 30 to 60 min before planned intercourse Long term treatment – Tadalafil (Cialis): 1-2 x 20 mg per week during 2-8 weeks – Vardenafil (Levitra): 2-3x 5 or 10 mg per week during 2-8 weeks – Sildenafil (Viagra): 2-3x 25 or 50 mg per week during 2-8 weeks PDE5 inhibitors, tips It is important to separate the intake of the pill from the intercourse in order to avoid a medically generated performance anxiety. The medication shall not necessarily induce a rigid erection It should facilitate an erection following a normal love process. PDE5 inhibitors: warning Simultaneous treatments with NO donors (nitro-glycerine etc) that will induce a possibly dangerous hypotension Contra indication to sexual activity Cardiovascular diseases like – Recent myocardial infarction or angina – Ictus – Arrhythmia, uncontrolled hypertension Muse Alprostadil MUSE Alprostatil Caverject Alprostatil Caverject Alprostatil Corpus cavernous Injection in the corpous cavernous Semi rigid implant Acuform (Mentor) Inflatable implant (AMS 700) réservoir de liquide Reservoir (full) pompe / soupape Reservoir (empty) cylindres What’s in a man’s mind Dr Georges-A. de Boccard March 10th, 2006