Impotence Research
Basic and Clinical Studies


February 2000, Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 19 - 22

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Paper
Vasculogenic impotence and cavernosal oxygen tension

SL Brown1,2, AD Seftel1,2, KP Strohl1,2 & TE Herbener1

1Departments of Urology, Radiology and Pulmonary Medicine, University Hospitals of Cleveland     2Cleveland Veterans Administration Medical Centre, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA    

Correspondence to: Dr AD Seftel, University Hospitals of Cleveland, Department of Urology, 11100 Euclid Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA.    

Keywords
impotence;   oxygen;   arteriogenic

Abstract

Aims of this study: To determine the associations, if any, of cavernosal oxygen tension with vasculogenic impotence.

Materials and Methods: We evaluated penile cavernosal blood gas levels in men with suspected vasculogenic impotence during penile duplex ultrasonography and/or dynamic infusion cavernosometry and cavernosography (DICC). Patients with suspected impotence were evaluated from 1992-1996. Patient ages ranged from 24-75 y (mean 48 y). Eighteen men had arteriogenic impotence diagnosed by abnormal penile duplex ultrasound after injection of a vasoactive agent, and 23 men had venous leakage diagnosed by DICC.

Results: Eighteen men with arteriogenic impotence had the following mean blood gas values: pH =7.38±0.01, PCO2=45.50±0.94, PO2 =65.17±2.16. Twenty-three men with venogenic (venous leak) impotence had the following mean cavernosal blood gas values: pH=7.41±0.01, PCO2=42.26±0.83, PO2=74.17±2.51. The differences in PO2 were significant (P<0.05). A subgroup of men with severe venous leakage had PO2 values that were similar to the low arterial PO2 values.

Conclusion: The low PO2 in patients with arteriogenic impotence, and the subset of men with severe venous leak impotence, support a global concept of low cavernosal PO2 as a mechanism for both arteriogenic and venogenic impotence.

International Journal of Impotence Research(2000) 12, 19-22.

© Macmillan Publishers Ltd 2000