Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.1.4.1 (phosphodiesterase)
18,767 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A significant proportion of myocardial ischemia is 'silent' in nature. Furthermore, this asymptomatic ischemia portends an adverse prognosis for patients with known coronary artery disease. Silent myocardial ischemia can be objectively assessed and quantified by a number of noninvasive means; however, ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring has emerged as a preferred method for both detection and analysis in hospital and during daily life conditions. Silent myocardial ischemia exhibits a circadian pattern. It represents an imbalance between myocardial oxygen supply and myocardial oxygen demand, and can be triggered by both physical and mental stress. The important role of endothelial dysfunction and autonomic nervous system influences has been recently elucidated. Up to 75% of ischemic episodes in patients are silent. Patients with asymptomatic coronary artery disease, chronic stable angina and unstable angina, and those postmyocardial infarction or postrevascularization who exhibit ST segment shift all show adverse short and long term prognosis compared with controls. Treatment modalities have included nitrates, beta-blockers, calcium antagonists, phosphodiesterase inhibitors, anxiolytics, anti-platelet agents and revascularization procedures. While the majority of these studies have demonstrated significant reduction in the frequency of silent myocardial ischemia, limited data on influencing prognosis are available; thus recommendations regarding treatment of these patients await the results of ongoing clinical trials.
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PMID:Current status of silent myocardial ischemia. 772 40

Sexual dysfunction associated with radical retropubic prostatectomy (RRP) may start before the surgery. Men undergoing RRP frequently have some degree of sexual dysfunction. In addition to the psychological stress of the diagnosis, the biopsy may itself have a detrimental effect. After surgery, all men will experience loss of ejaculate, because the organ responsible for ejaculate has been removed. Orgasm quality is adversely affected in many men. Erectile dysfunction is immediate and recovery from it is slow. Initially, phosphodiesterase (PDE)-5 inhibitors do not work, and they take up to 18 months for their effect to be maximized. Younger men who have had bilateral nerve-sparing procedures respond the best. Combination treatment with prostaglandin E1 or high-dose PDE-5 inhibitors may provide salvage therapy when initial PDE-5 inhibitor therapy has failed.
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PMID:Sexual dysfunction after radical prostatectomy. 1698 95

Vascular endothelial dysfunction is regarded as a primary phenotypic expression of normal human aging. This senescence-induced disorder is the likely culprit underlying the increased cardiovascular and metabolic disease risks associated with aging. The rate of this age-dependent deterioration is largely influenced by the poor-quality lifestyle choice, such as smoking, sedentary daily life, chronic alcohol ingestion, high salt intake, unbalanced diet, and mental stress; and it is accelerated by cardiovascular and metabolic diseases. Although minimizing these detrimental factors is the best course of action, nonetheless chronological age steadily impairs endothelial function through reduced endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) expression/action, accelerated nitric oxide (NO) degradation, increased phosphodiesterase activity, inhibition of NOS activity by endogenous NOS inhibitors, increased production of reactive oxygen species, inflammatory reactions, decreased endothelial progenitor cell number and function, and impaired telomerase activity or telomere shortening. Endothelial dysfunction in regional vasculatures results in cerebral hypoperfusion triggering cognitive dysfunction and Alzheimer's disease, coronary artery insufficiency, penile erectile dysfunction, and circulatory failures in other organs and tissues. Possible prophylactic measures to minimize age-related endothelial dysfunction are also summarized in this review.
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PMID:Age-related changes in endothelial function and blood flow regulation. 2207 49

Sildenafil has had a dramatic influence on the field of sexual medicine over the past 20 years. Not only have phosphodiesterase-5 (PDE5) inhibitors improved the treatment of erectile dysfunction (ED), they have indirectly contributed to the treatment of male factor infertility. A review of the literature between 1998 - 2018 was performed using PubMed with regards to sildenafil and male infertility. Numerous studies have demonstrated sildenafil's safety and efficacy for treating ED. Sildenafil does not alter semen parameters, and, in fact, may positively affect semen parameters. Sildenafil is helpful for treating ED caused by the psychological stress of infertility treatments. Sildenafil has improved the treatment of ED and may have a benefit on semen parameters. This has aided in the management of male factor infertility, and has contributed to hundreds of thousands of pregnancies that would have been more difficult, as it was before its advent.
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PMID:Sildenafil's impact on male infertility: what has changed in 20 years? 3083 20