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Impact of aging on penile hemodynamics in men responding normally to prostaglandin injection: A power Doppler study
Author(s) -
SAKAMOTO HIDEO,
KUROSAWA KAZUHIRO,
SUDOU NAOKI,
ISHIKAWA KIMIYASU,
OGAWA YOSHIO,
YOSHIDA HIDEKI
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
international journal of urology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.172
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1442-2042
pISSN - 0919-8172
DOI - 10.1111/j.1442-2042.2005.01124.x
Subject(s) - medicine , hemodynamics , doppler effect , power doppler , cardiology , surgery , ultrasonography , physics , astronomy
Aim: Hemodynamic changes with aging in the penile arterial circulation, including the helicine arteries, were evaluated with power Doppler imaging in erectile dysfunction patients with a normal response to prostaglandin injection. Methods: In 36 patients with erectile dysfunction and no definite vascular risk factors, 72 corpora were examined using power Doppler imaging. Patients were classified by age: younger than 40 years, from 40 to 49, or 50 and older. Hemodynamic variables in the cavernous arteries, helicine arteries and dorsal arteries were measured after intracavernous injection of prostaglandin E 1 (20 µg). Results: All cavernous arteries had a maximum peak systolic velocity of greater than 35 cm/s and a minimum end‐diastolic velocity of less than 0 cm/s. Mean peak systolic velocity in the cavernous artery differed between groups ( P = 0.016), especially between the younger than 40 age group and the 40–49 age group. Peak systolic velocity correlated negatively with age ( P = 0.0048). In the helicine arteries and dorsal arteries, peak systolic velocity did not differ between groups and showed no correlation with age. End‐diastolic velocity, resistance index and acceleration time did not differ between groups, or correlate with age for any artery. Conclusions: Hemodynamic change with aging occurs predominantly in the cavernous arteries, where peak systolic velocity decreases. The arterial circulation beyond the cavernous arteries, including the helicine arteries, as well as veno‐occlusive mechanisms, may have an important role in maintaining erectile function in aging.