Display Settings:

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination
    Aging Clin Exp Res. 2003 Jun;15(3):222-33.

    New achievements and pharmacotherapeutic approaches to impotence in the elderly.

    Source

    Department of Internal Medicine, Roma Tor Vergata University, Roma, Italy. gfraj@flashnet.it

    Abstract

    Erectile dysfunction (ED) has a negative impact on the quality of life of elderly men, but impotence is not an absolute concomitant of aging. Aging changes influencing sexual function in men consist of a decreased capacity to reach arousal by imagination or view, fragility of erection, and an increase in the refractory period. These events may be part of the andropause syndrome, which includes a decrease in intellectual activity, fatigue, depression, decreases in body hair, lean body mass and bone mineral density, accompanied by an increase in weight. As a consequence, the overlap of aging processes, concurrent diseases and social situations to which elderly men are subject, results in the great variability reported in epidemiological studies. In the same way, the complex physiology of erection depends on the social, environmental, or physical context in which it occurs. New achievements in research on intracellular mechanisms of erection and on the neuroendocrinology of aging contribute to better understanding the pathophysiology of ED in the elderly. For example, testosterone declines with age with great interindividual variability, since other hormonal changes are also involved. What currently can be easily identified is the alteration of LH-testosterone feedback alterations, although hormone levels fall in the normal range. Nevertheless, the extent to which age-dependent decline in hormones leads to health problems that may affect the quality of life remains to be clarified. Several concepts on aging-related processes have been challenged, and conditions that were once accepted as physiologically age-related are now thought to lead to medical problems, but until now erectile dysfunction remains underreported, underdiagnosed, and undertreated, especially in the elderly. Nowadays, we are witnessing a rapid growth in available pharmacotherapies, from intracavernous injections of vasoactive drugs, to powerful new oral agents, with differing pharmacological dynamic and kinetic properties. New options for treatment are therefore possible, taking into account both the possibility of changing ineffective drugs and augmenting efficacy by means of synergistic associations. This rich generation of progress is certainly contributing to a better medical approach to sexuality in aging people.

    PMID:
    14582685
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

      Supplemental Content

      Recent activity

      Your browsing activity is empty.

      Activity recording is turned off.

      Turn recording back on

      See more...
      Write to the Help Desk