8 Healthcare professionals helping men with erectile dysfunction
/Every man deserves the best in terms of which medical professionals to seek out discovering the cause and ideal treatment for this condition.
Read MoreEvery man deserves the best in terms of which medical professionals to seek out discovering the cause and ideal treatment for this condition.
Read MoreThis inability to control urine leading to urine leakage can usually be attributed to weak or damaged bladder muscles, an overactive bladder, certain prostate conditions, or nerve damage.
Read MoreMen are 24 percent less likely than women to have visited a doctor within the past year, according to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ).
Read MoreAnorgasmia is the inability to reach an orgasm or climax during sexual activity.
Read MoreOut of the 30.3 million, one out of every four does not know or has not yet been diagnosed with the disease. Diabetes is a chronic, progressive disease that needs to be well-managed and kept under control to avoid serious complications.
Read MoreThis inflammation of the prostate gland – anything word ending in “itis” means inflammation – annually causes more than two million men to seek help from their doctor with this painful condition.
Read MoreLess than 1 man in 100,000 each year is diagnosed accounting for less than 1% of cancers of men in the United States.
Read MoreSince prostate cancer is the second most common cancer in men after skin cancer, men would be wise to know certain facts about prostate specific antigen or the PSA test.
Read MoreFortunately, thanks to the American Heart Association getting the message out on heart health, fewer Americans are dying of heart disease than ever.
Read MoreIt’s common for men to “man it up” when it comes to their health. They often ignore symptoms and delay getting them checked out.
Read MoreIt’s an unfortunate fact but men are much less likely to take good care of their teeth as women do.
Read MoreOctober is the month to raise recognition of breast cancer as it is designated as Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
Read MoreErectile dysfunction is defined as the inability to develop or maintain an erection during sex.
Read MoreWhen men hear of another man who has an enlarged prostate, their first thoughts are often that it must be prostate cancer.
Read MoreErectile dysfunction linked to opioid use in men
(Author – Cheryl Mussatto MS, RD, LD for use by Dr. David Samadi)
Men with chronic pain using opioids to deal with the discomfort should reconsider that decision. Pain-killing medications known as opioids may relieve the pain, but they also can shut down your sex life. This fact is not necessarily well-known among the medical community but should be discussed with men before automatically prescribing these drugs.
A study back in 2013 which was published in the journal Spine found that men who were prescribed medications for erectile dysfunction (ED) or low testosterone levels were more likely to be taking an opioid medication for chronic back pain. Men with persistent pain should be informed of this potential side effect of long-term opioid use. Since the study was an observational study, it limits the ability to make a cause-and-effect inference. While opioid use and ED seem to go together, it can’t be said that one causes the other.
Around 11,000 men were included in this study that all had back pain. Out of this group, more than 900 men received medications for ED (Viagra, Cialis, or Levitra), or testosterone replacement. Generally, those men were older than those who did not have a prescription for ED. These same men were also more likely to have depression and other health conditions.
Commonly used prescribed opioids include hydrocodone, oxycodone, and morphine. For this study, men who used an opioid for more than 120 days, or more than 90 days if more than 10 prescriptions were filled for the drug, as long-term use.
The most significant factor for the men in getting a prescription for ED was their age. Men between ages of 60 and 69 were 14 times more likely to receive a prescription for ED than men who were between 18 and 29.
When the data was adjusted for other possible factors, including age, the researchers found that men who took opioid pain medications for long periods, were about 50 percent more likely to have ED medications or testosterone replacement therapy. Again limitations with the study do not prove that opioid use causes ED as ED could be related to the pain the men were experiencing. However, there is evidence that men who stop taking opioids after using them for a short time will see an improvement in erectile dysfunction but it’s not clear if the same is true after long-term use.
In recent years, there has been growing evidence and much concern on long-term use of opioids on overall health of anyone taking them for pain. The body compensates for taking long-term pain medications, due to changes in the brain and spinal cord making people more sensitive to them.
There can be other contributing factors to ED besides possibly opioid medication use such as diabetes, heart disease, peripheral vascular disease, and alcohol use. In the meantime, all doctors treating any man for chronic pain should discuss with them if they are also experiencing ED.
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For men who have gout, they may also find they are having trouble with erectile dysfunction or ED.
Read MoreIt would not be unusual if the word “anorgasmia” is unfamiliar to you. Doctors rarely ask about the problem and most men will choose instead to suffer in silence as they themselves are reluctant or embarrassed to bring it up to their doctor.
This often includes conditions such as prostate enlargement also known as benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and prostate cancer. But around 2 million American men each year will also make appointments with their doctors for a less well-known but still painful prostate problem – prostatitis.
This news is from a four-year study published in Circulation finding that men who experience vascular-related impotence, are twice as likely to suffer a heart attack, stroke, or sudden cardiac death.
Read MoreEating disorders are thought of as a predominately female illness, well-known to afflict girls and women in varying degrees from anorexia to bulimia to binge eating.
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