Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Transient organic causes of impotence include alcohol consumption, drug use or inflammatory genital disease. Many diagnoses of organic impotence, with diabetes, for example, have been premature and have resulted in iatrogenic,
psychogenic impotence
. After a stroke, heart attack or major surgery,
depression
may cause impotence. Anxiety and sexual ignorance are major etiologic factors. Thus, sex education and uncomplicated sex therapy can achieve a high percentage of cure. Penile plethysmography during sleep provides useful information. Penile prostheses are helpful for appropriately motivated couples when there is permanent impotence.
...
PMID:Impotence--some causes and cures. 62 40
Hypnosis can be a useful adjunct to other treatment modalities. For example, hypnosis may induce a level of relaxation that allows patients to cooperate more easily with conventional treatment. The often dramatic historical background of hypnosis has led to misconceptions about hypnotic technique and its clinical applications in modern medicine. Hypnosis is useful in the treatment of acute and chronic pain, somatoform and habit disorders, anxiety and
depression
. Persons who are attempting to stop smoking, patients with bulimia and those with
psychogenic impotence
may respond to hypnosis.
...
PMID:Hypnosis in family medicine. 223 52
This study prospectively assessed the use, effectiveness, and sexual and psychosocial impact of self-injection treatment in 15 men with
psychogenic impotence
. Sixty percent dropped out of self-injection treatment by 6 months. Those who remained used self-injections about four times monthly with a 94% success rate. Frequency of intercourse and sexual satisfaction increased. Anxiety decreased, and trends toward improvement in
depression
and self-esteem were evident. Qualitative data indicated that performance anxiety was not alleviated, dependence upon injections for intercourse remained, symptom substitution did not occur, and capacity for intimacy was not improved.
...
PMID:Self-injection of papaverine and phentolamine in the treatment of psychogenic impotence. 259 54
A personal series of 256 cases of acromegaly/gigantism seen over a 20-year period from 1963 is described. The insidious nature of the condition resulted in delay in diagnosis which was often made by a doctor when seeing the patient for an unrelated problem. Other features which commonly led to the diagnosis being made were headache, change in appearance, carpal tunnel syndrome, amenorrhoea and diabetes. The Hardy system for grading the radiological appearance of the pituitary tumour was used. Widely invasive tumours were not common but tended to occur in patients with younger age of onset and high GH levels. The occurrence of various symptoms and clinical features was noted and the changes resulting from reducing the GH level to normal. The incidence of hypertension, but not of coronary artery disease, is increased and the blood pressure may be reduced following successful treatment. The effects on the upper and lower respiratory tract are reported as well as sleep apnoea and problems associated with anaesthesia. Skin manifestations included sweating, pigmented skin tags, acanthosis nigricans and cutis verticis gyrata. In the skeletal system the incidence of kyphoscoliosis and osteoarthritis especially of the hip is reported: the question of hip replacement is discussed. Diabetes mellitus disappeared in most cases if the acromegaly was cured. In men but not in women the incidence of colloid nodular goitre was increased as was hyperthyroidism in middle-aged women. In two patients a parathyroid adenoma was present: hypercalcaemia was present in five additional patients, but the cause was not determined. The common occurrence of amenorrhoea in the younger women was noted, it was not always associated with hyperprolactinaemia, and often responded to successful treatment of the acromegaly. The association of acromegaly with hirsutism and galactorrhoea is confirmed. The incidence of impotence and loss of libid in the men is discussed: in a proportion of those in whom the acromegaly was cured, potency returned, but in a number
depression
occurred and what was believed to be
psychogenic impotence
persisted. Hyperprolactinaemia was found in 49 out of 151 patients with active acromegaly in whom the prolactin level was measured. Previous reports have indicated a doubling of death rates in acromegalics. In this series there were 47 deaths observed compared to 37.2 expected. The increased death rate was in women of all ages and in men under the age of 55, The increased deaths in the women were from cardiovascular and cerebrovascular causes and from breast cancer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Acromegaly. 330 90
In brief, the treatment of impotence is the treatment of the underlying cause whenever possible. When irreversible organic impotence is found, however, penile prosthesis should be considered. Both hydraulic inflatable and semirigid rod types are available. Morbidity with the procedure is relatively low in experienced hands and patient satisfaction has been reported as quite high. Pharmacogenic impotence may require a change or reduction of medication.
Depression
usually responds to some combination of antidepressants, psychotherapy, or electroconvulsive therapy, while modern short-term sex therapy has proved effective in reversing many of the anxiety-related cases. Deep-seated, anxiety-based impotence may require extensive psychotherapy, but many cases of recent-onset
psychogenic impotence
can be managed quite successfully with education, reassurance, and the optional short-term use of testosterone.
...
PMID:Erectile impotence--it can be highly treatable. 742 63
Although various experimental models of mental illness, such as anxiety and
depression
, have been developed, little attention has been paid to male
psychogenic impotence
. Since sociopsychological factors are presumed to play an important role in many cases of human impotence, an animal model of
psychogenic impotence
is needed to satisfy such validity. From an ethological viewpoint, we have recently developed new animal models for
psychogenic impotence
using sociopsychological manipulations, that is, social deprivation and social conflict. This review focused only on the methodology and the actions of drugs on such copulatory disorder induced by social stress. Possible brain mechanisms underlying stress-induced copulatory disorder were also considered.
...
PMID:[New animal models for psychogenic impotence: an ethological approach to copulatory disorder induced by social stress]. 1002 88