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)

We studied the effects of sildenafil on nocturnal penile erections. We prospectively evaluated 36 patients with organic or psychogenic impotence and 5 normal, potent men. All patients completed 3 sessions of consecutive nights using the RigiScan Plus device. The first two nights the patients were asked to take placebo before the session and to take 50 mg of sildenafil before the third session. In the organic impotence group the use of sildenafil induced a significant improvement in time of rigidity 60-100%, rigidity and tumescence activity unit values and rigidity and tumescence activity unit values per hour in the tip and base. In the psychogenic impotence group it caused significant improvement only in rigidity activity unit per hour in the tip. In the potent men, changes were statistically insignificant. Sildenafil improves nocturnal penile erectile activity in organic impotence. Our study shows that phosphodiesterase inhibitors can improve penile erections not induced by sexual stimulation.
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PMID:Sildenafil improves nocturnal penile erections in organic impotence. 1142 52

Erectile dysfunction affects over half of all men between 50 and 70 years of age, and by the age of 40, about 40% of men may suffer from some form of erectile dysfunction. Many disease states, such as diabetes, hypertension, depression, and vascular disease, are associated with the condition, which may occur many years prior to the onset of these disorders. The phenomenal success of sildenafil in improving erections in men with erectile dysfunction is due to the fact that the drug, as a phosphodiesterase inhibitor, improves the relaxation of smooth muscle cells, which become dysfunctional with the aging process. However, not everyone responds to this medication, mainly because the efficacy of the drug is directly dependent on the release of nitric oxide from the nerve terminals of the cavernosal nerve, and this may become defective with aging/certain disease states. The goal of gene therapy for organic impotence is to allow the patient to sustain physiologically elicited erections without resorting to pharmacological treatment immediately prior to the sexual act. Experimental efforts in gene therapy for erectile dysfunction are likely to continue intensively in a series of directions, some specific to the nature of the selected gene to be manipulated or the physiology of the corpora cavernosa itself, and others extrapolatable from the advancement of gene therapy in general.
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PMID:Future strategies for treating erectile dysfunction. 1698 14