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Medical
diagnosis
There
are no formal tests to diagnose erectile dysfunction.
Some blood tests are generally done to exclude underlying
disease, such as diabetes, hypogonadism and prolactinoma.
Impotence is also related to generally poor physical
health, poor dietary habits, obesity, and most specifically
cardiovascular disease such as coronary artery disease
and peripheral vascular disease.
A
useful and simple way to distinguish between physiological
and psychological impotence is to determine whether
the patient ever has an erection. If never, the problem
is likely to be physiological; if sometimes (however
rarely), it could be physiological or psychological.
The current diagnostic and statistical manual of mental
diseases (DSM-IV) has included a listing for impotence.
Clinical
Tests Used to Diagnose ED
Duplex
ultrasound
Duplex ultrasound is used to evaluate blood flow,
venous leak, signs of atherosclerosis, and scarring
or calcification of erectile tissue. Injecting prostaglandin,
a hormone-like stimulator produced in the body, induces
erection. Ultrasound is then used to see vascular
dilation and measure penile blood pressure. Measurements
are compared to those taken when the penis is flaccid.
Penile
nerves function
Tests such as the bulbocavernosus reflex test are
used to determine if there is sufficient nerve sensation
in the penis. The physician squeezes the glans (head)
of the penis, which immediately causes the anus to
contract if nerve function is normal. A physician
measures the latency between squeeze and contraction
by observing the anal sphincter or by feeling it with
a gloved finger inserted past the anus. Specific nerve
tests are used in patients with suspected nerve damage
as a result of diabetes or nerve disease.
Nocturnal
penile tumescence (NPT)
It is normal for a man to have five to six erections
during sleep, especially during rapid eye movement
(REM). Their absence may indicate a problem with nerve
function or blood supply in the penis. There are two
methods for measuring changes in penile rigidity and
circumference during nocturnal erection: snap gauge
and strain gauge. (It should be noted that a significant
proportion of men who have no sexual dysfunction nonetheless
do not have regular nocturnal erections. Thus presence
of NPT tends to signify physically functional systems,
but absence of NPT may be ambiguous and not rule out
either cause.)
Penile
biothesiometry
This test uses electromagnetic vibration to evaluate
sensitivity and nerve function in the glans and shaft
of the penis. A decreased perception of vibration
may indicate nerve damage in the pelvic area, which
can lead to impotence.
Penile
Angiogram
Invasive test - allows visualization of the circulation
in the penis and is used during the repair of a priapism.
Dynamic
Infusion Cavernosometry
(Abbreviated DICC) technique in which fluid is pumped
into the penis at a known rate and pressure. It gives
a measurement of the vascular pressure in the corpus
cavernosum during an erection. To do this test, a
vasodilator like prostaglandin E-1 is injected to
measure the rate of infusion required to get a rigid
erection and to help find how severe the venous leak
is.
Corpus
Cavernosometry
Cavernosography measurement of the vascular pressure
in the corpus cavernosum. Saline is infused under
pressure into the corpus cavernosum with a butterfly
needle, and the flow rate needed to maintain an erection
indicates the degree of venous leakage. The leaking
veins responsible may be visualised by infusing a
mixture of saline and x ray contrast medium and performing
a cavernosogram.
Digital
Subtraction Angiography
In DSA, the images are acquired digitally. The computer
creates a mask from lower-contrast x-rays of the same
area and digitally isolates the blood vessels (this
is done manually through darkroom masking with traditional
angiography).
Magnetic
resonance angiography (MRA)
This is similar to magnetic resonance imaging. Magnetic
resonance angiography uses magnetic fields and radio
waves to provide detailed images of the blood vessels.
Doctors may inject a "contrast agent" into
the patient's bloodstream that causes vascular tissues
to stand out against other tissues. The contrast agent
provides for enhanced information regarding blood
supply and vascular anomalies. Aside from the IV used
to introduce the contrast material into the bloodstream,
magnetic resonance angiography is noninvasive and
painless.
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