You know, when a man loses his manhood it really does a mental number on him. He can’t perform in the bedroom any more or like he should. We need to take a closer look at what the problem is.
What is erectile dysfunction?
ED is when a man has difficulty getting or maintaining an erection long enough for sex. It happens when not enough blood flows to the penis. (IE blockage)
ED isn’t the same for all men. Some men aren’t able to get an erection at all. Others can get one, but it’s not hard enough for sex. And others get a hard erection but lose it before or during sex.
ED is a medical condition. So in most cases, erections will not improve without treatment.
Many men avoid discussing ED. In fact, they often wait more than a year before talking to their doctor. But once they’ve had the discussion, most guys say they feel relieved to have finally done something about it.
Erectile dysfunction is a strong warning sign that a man might be at increased risk for heart attack, stroke and other cardiovascular problems, a long-running study indicates.Though adding erectile dysfunction to the list of known risk factors determined by the Framingham Heart Study — cholesterol, smoking, high blood pressure — doesn’t improve the prediction of future cardiovascular trouble, it can be a quick, free addition to risk assessment.
“If a man presents with erectile dysfunction, the physician should work him up for cardiovascular disease. It is low cost — indeed, no cost — with no risk associated with it.
The study is the latest of several that have linked erectile dysfunction to cardiovascular disease. That is to be expected, Araujo said, because the same artery-blocking conditions that reduce blood flow to the heart and brain can also reduce flow to the penis.
The study followed 1,057 men, aged 40 to 70, for an average of 12 years. Overall, 37 percent of the men with erectile dysfunction were in the high-risk category according to the Framingham standards, compared with 17 percent of men without erectile dysfunction.
Once the link to cardiovascular problems was established, “we started modeling to see if we added erectile dysfunction to the Framingham risk profile we could reclassify some men,” Araujo said. “In fact, it doesn’t do much.”
The reason is that the Framingham risk profile is hard to improve on, he said. Over the years, studies of a number of diagnostic techniques — including computerized tomography scanning and various molecular markers, such as inflammation-related C-reactive protein — have been shown not to improve on the Framingham profile’s predictive power.
But those other measures are either costly, require blood tests or carry some risk, whereas erectile dysfunction can be determined by a simple question.
“Why not ask a simple question in the office that will reveal a diagnosis very clearly?” Do you have Heart disease? “It is cheaper and easier than doing a lipid profile or measuring high blood pressure.”
It’s information that men should offer to their doctors. “Self-reported erectile dysfunction matches what urologists say about the question,” he said. “We should get the message out: If you have an erectile problem, see your doctor.
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