| Literature DB >> 26689522 |
Yong Guan1, Sun Wendong2, Shengtian Zhao2, Tongyan Liu3, Yuqiang Liu2, Xiulin Zhang2, Mingzhen Yuan2.
Abstract
Erectile dysfunction (ED) is a common complication of pelvic fractures. To identify the vascular and neurogenic factors associated with ED, 120 patients admitted with ED after traumatic pelvic fracture between January 2009 and June 2013 were enrolled in this study. All patients answered the International Index of Erectile Function (IIEF-5) questionnaire. Nocturnal penile tumescence (NPT) testing confirmed the occurrence of ED in 96 (80%) patients on whom penile duplex ultrasound and neurophysiological testing were further performed. Of these ED patients 29 (30%) were demonstrated only with vascular abnormality, 41 (42.7%) were detected only with neural abnormality, 26 (27.1%) revealed mixed abnormalities. Of the 55 patients (29+26) with vascular problems, 7 patients (12.7%) with abnormal arterial response to intracavernous injection of Bimix (15mg papaverine and 1mg phentolamine), 31 (56.4%) with corporal veno-occlusive dysfunction and 17 (30.9%) had both problems. Of the 67 (41+26) patients with abnormal neurophysiological outcomes, 51 (76.1%) with abnormal bulbocavernosus re?ex (BCR), 20 (29.9%) with pathological pudendal nerve evoked potentials (PDEPs) and 25 (37.3%) with abnormal posterior tibial somatosensory nerve evoked potentials (PTSSEPs). Our observation indicated that neurogenic factors are important for the generation of ED in patients with pelvic fracture; venous impotence is more common than arteriogenic ED.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26689522 PMCID: PMC4756973 DOI: 10.1590/S1677-5538.IBJU.2014.0170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Braz J Urol ISSN: 1677-5538 Impact factor: 1.541
Figure 1Flow diagram for evaluation of ED patients. All patients answered IIEf-5 questionnaire and were submitted to npT. Duplex ultrasonography and neurophysiological tests were performed if problems were detected with npT. cavernosography was undertaken to determine if there was venous leakage in patients suspected with venogenic ED.
Patients distribution based on the type of pelvic fracture.
| Type A | Type B | Type C | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients. | 73 | 35 | 12 |
| % | 60.8% (73 of 120) | 29.2% (35 of 120) | 10.0% (12 of 120) |
Grading and distribution of ED patients based on IIEf-5 scores.
| ED Status | Theoretical EF Domain Scores | The Number of Patients (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Without ED | (26-30) | 5 (4.2%) |
| With ED | (<25) | 115 (95.8%) |
| Mild ED | (22-25) | 16 (13.3%) |
| Mild to moderate ED | (17-21) | 34 (28.3%) |
| Moderate ED | (11-16) | 47 (39.2%) |
| Severe ED | (6-10) | 18 (15.0%) |
Criteria from Cappelleri et al. .
Distribution of ED patients based on etiology.
| Origin | NPT | Vasculogenic ED | Neurogenic ED | Vasculogenic and Neurogenic | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arteriogenic | Venogenic | Mixed | ||||
| Number | 96 | 3 | 16 | 10 | 41 | 26 |
One of the neurophysiologic tests (BCR, PDEP or PTSSEPs) was abnormal indicating the patients had neurogenic ED.
Vasculogenic ED patient distribution.
| Arteriogenic | Venogenic | Mixed | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patient. | 7 | 31 | 17 |
| % | 12.7% (7 of 55) | 56.4% (31of 55) | 30.9% (17 of 55) |
These 55 vasculogenic ED patients include 29 only with vasculogenic and 26 with both neurogenic and vasculogenic origin.
Figure 2Abnormal arterial or venous responses to intracavernous injection of Bimix in ED patients. patients received a single intracavernous injection of Bimix (15 mg papaverine and 1 mg phentolamine) then ultrasonography was performed. (a) peak systolic velocity (psv)>35cm/sec and the resistance index (RI)=1 in a patient indicating a normal arterial and venous response. (b) In one ED patient psv<35cm/sec with the end-diastolic velocities (EDv)<5cm/sec suggesting abnormal arterial response. (c) in another ED patient psv>35cm/sec with EDv>5cm/sec indicating veno-occlusive dysfunction. (d) psv<35cm/sec with EDv>5cm/sec suggesting both arterial and venous abnormal responses.
Figure 3Venous leakage revealed by cavernosography in venogenic ED patients. contrast was injected intracavernously following administration of 15 mg papaverine and 1 mg phentolamine. solid arrow indicates leakage from the vein. (a) the positive film (b) the negative film.
Neurogenic ED patient distribution.
| BCR | PDEP | PTSSEPs | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients. | 51 | 20 | 25 |
| % | 76.1% (51 of 67) | 29.9% (20 of 67) | 37.3% (25 of 67) |
These 67 patients included 41 only with neurogenic and 26 with both neurogenic and vasculogenic origin. One patient may have two or three abnormal outcomes.
ED patients with abnormal BCR outcomes.
| Bilateral | Unilateral | No response | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients. | 9 | 37 | 5 |
| % | 17.6% (9 of 51) | 72.5% (37 of 51) | 9.8% (5 of 51) |