Impotence: A Red Flag for Heart
Disease
For men, flagging potency can be a red
flag that something's not right in the cardiovascular system.
And experts say men who rush to fix the problem with impotence
drugs may be ignoring a bigger threat to their health.
"Erectile dysfunction [ED]
is frequently a manifestation of underlying cardiovascular problems.
It even precedes angina -- it can be an early warning, in that
respect," said Dr. Andrew McCullough, director of male sexual
health, fertility and microsurgery at New York University School
of Medicine in New York City.
Early in 2004, researchers led
by Dr. Alan Bank of the St. Paul Heart Clinic in Minnesota published
a study showing that the arteries of men with ED expanded less
efficiently than men without erectile difficulties -- a possible
sign of underlying heart disease.
McCullough likened ED to a common
plumbing problem: "If you turn on your kitchen faucet and
you don't get any flow, either the faucet's broken or the pipes
are clogged."
For men with advanced heart disease,
the clogged-pipe explanation probably holds true, since buildup
of cholesterol in arteries can greatly reduce blood flow.
But many men with ED aren't anywhere
near this stage of cardiovascular deterioration. For them, the
faucet -- the vessels inside the penis and the smooth muscle around
them -- may be broken on a biochemical level.
"We're learning that erectile
dysfunction is largely due to reduced nitric oxide in the endothelium,
the inner lining of blood vessels," explained Dr. David Gutterman,
professor of medicine at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee.
As blood flow demands increase
(as happens during an erection), the endothelium releases nitric
oxide to help trigger blood vessel expansion.
"Nitric oxide is very important
for normal erectile function," Gutterman said. "It's
also -- and here's the link to heart disease -- very important
as an anti-atherosclerotic agent, resisting 'hardening of the
arteries.' "
In that sense, ED may serve as
an early signal that blood vessels elsewhere in the body aren't
expanding as they should, either.
It's no coincidence, then, that
drugs such as Viagra -- which helps increase nitric oxide levels
in the endothelium -- were first studied as possible treatments
for cardiac trouble.
"However, it was found that
these drugs do this better in some organs rather than others,"
Gutterman said. "It was found that they work much better
for urological problems than for the heart."
Looking at the problem from the
other side, Bank's team is currently researching whether or not
the statin family of cholesterol-lowering drugs might help fight
ED.
"We do know that statins improve
the function of the enzyme, nitric oxide synthase, that produces
nitric oxide inside the blood vessels," Gutterman pointed
out. "That's probably related to the very mechanism that
helps get rid of ED."
In the meantime, men with erectile
difficulties should stop and consider the possible underlying
cause of that dysfunction, McCullough said.
"Initially, when Viagra was
first approved, there were all kinds of direct-to-consumer ads
associating ED with a physiologic process, to convince men that
it wasn't just psychological, and that it might be linked to underlying
cardiovascular disease," he said.
"But now, there's a minimalization
of all that in these ads. So guys who have these problems just
say 'OK, I'll go online and get some Viagra,' " McCullough
said.
But that type of attitude has its
dangers, he said.
"One of the most serious things,
in my mind, is the guy who fails Viagra, Cialis, Levitra. Because
to me, that suggests he's got more serious underlying disease
than some guy for whom it works," he said.
McCullough's advice? "Go see
your doctor."
Gutterman agreed. "Some folks
with undiagnosed heart disease might not get chest pain first,
but they'll get erectile dysfunction. It's just another way of
picking up on early coronary disease."
Reference
Source 101
September 27, 2004
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