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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Erectile dysfunction
is a frequent condition in cardiovascular patients. Since the arrival of oral erection-supporting medication, patients want to know how safe sexual activity is in cardiovascular disease in general and during use of erection-supporting medication in particular. Sexual intercourse with a steady partner causes no more cardiovascular risk than normal daily activities such as ironing, 2 kilometers of walking without climbing, paperhanging, playing golf or gardening. The relative risk of myocardial infarction during sexual activity is not significantly higher than for healthy persons. The incidence of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality is not higher among users of sildenafil. Sildenafil is contraindicated in patients using long-acting nitrates or who may need to use short-acting nitrates, because the combination may cause a sharp fall of the blood pressure. No interactions have been observed with beta-receptor blockers, calcium antagonists, thiazide and loop diuretics and ACE inhibitors. Before prescribing a symptomatic (pharmaceutical) treatment for patients with an erection disorder, attention should be given tot the sexological, psychological and medical backgrounds of the disorder. Secondary prevention of atherosclerotic risk factors is also important: regulation of blood pressure and blood sugar level, hyperlipidaemia and
obesity
, as well as a change of lifestyle (giving up smoking, adapting of diet and more physical exertion). Patients with a very low cardiac capacity should be advised to refrain from treatment of the erection disorder.
...
PMID:[Drug treatment of erection disorders in patients with cardiovascular disease]. 1121 61
In males, aging, health and disease are processes that occur over physiologic time and involve a cascade of hormonal, biochemical and physiological changes that accompany the down-regulation of the hypothalamic-anterior pituitary-testicular axis. As aging progresses there are relative increases of body fat and decreases in muscle mass. The increased adipose tissue mass is associated with the production of a number of newly generated factors. These include aromatase, leptin, PAI-1, insulin resistance, and the dyslipidemias, all of which can lead to tissue damage. Fatty tissue becomes the focal point for study as it represents the intersection between energy storage and mobilization. The increase in adipose tissue is associated with an increase in the enzyme aromatase that converts testosterone to estradiol and leads to diminished testosterone levels that favor the preferential deposition of visceral fat. As the total body fat mass increases, hormone resistance develops for leptin and insulin. Increasing leptin fails to prevent weight gain and the hypogonadal-
obesity
cycle ensues causing further visceral
obesity
and insulin resistance. The progressive insulin resistance leads to a high triglyceride-low HDL pattern of dyslipidemia and increased cardiovascular risk. All of these factors eventually contribute to the CHAOS Complex: coronary disease, hypertension, adult-onset diabetes mellitus,
obesity
and/or stroke as permanent changes unfold. Other consequences of the chronic hypogonadal state include osteopenia, extreme fatigue, depression, insomnia, loss of aggressiveness and
erectile dysfunction
all of which develop over variable periods of time.
...
PMID:Aromatase, adiposity, aging and disease. The hypogonadal-metabolic-atherogenic-disease and aging connection. 1139 22
Erection is a hemodynamic event and accordingly,
erectile dysfunction
(ED) is closely related with ischemic heart disease. We should confirm that the cardiac condition of the ED patient is safe enough to perform sexual intercourse prior to beginning treatment for ED. Asymptomatic ischemic heart disease cannot be diagnosed only in an interview, but it's difficult to perform cardiac exercise tests on all patients complaining of ED. Therefore, screening methods to evaluate patients who should undergo exercise tests are needed. Sixty patients with
erectile dysfunction
participated in this study. Physical examinations, interviews, and color Doppler examinations were conducted. Chest X-rays and electrocardiograms of all patients in the resting position were obtained, as were electrocardiograms following exercise. Echocardiograms, treadmill test results, thallium exercise scintigrams, and coronary angiograms were obtained as required for diagnosis. Two patients were excluded because they had obvious arteriogenic ED due to perineal injury. Fifty-eight patients underwent Doppler evaluations of their cavernous arteries and heart exercise tests. Fourteen patients (24.1%) were diagnosed with ischemic heart disease. Although six of them had already been diagnosed with ischemic heart disease, eight were newly diagnosed by the exercise tests. Cardiovascular risk factors such as advanced age, hyperlipidemia, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, smoking, and
obesity
were not sufficient predictive factors. The mean peak systolic velocity of the patients without ischemic heart disease was 34.6 cm/s vs 22.0 cm/s in those with ischemic heart disease. Only 3.7% of patients whose peak systolic velocity in the cavernous artery was equal to or exceeded 35 cm/s had ischemic heart disease. On the other hand, 41.9% of patients with peak systolic velocity of less than 35 cm/s had ischemic heart disease. The sensitivity of peak systolic velocity against ischemic heart disease was 92.9%, and specificity was 59.1%. In ED patients, incidences of complications involving symptomatic or asymptomatic ischemic heart disease were found to be high. The peak systolic velocity in the cavernous artery is thought to be a useful predictive factor of ischemic heart disease in ED patients. When a patient reveals a peak systolic velocity of less than 35 cm/s, he should undergo heart exercise tests prior to treatment of ED.
...
PMID:Screening of ischemic heart disease with cavernous artery blood flow in erectile dysfunctional patients. 1142 48
Obesity
has been shown to increase the risk or be associated with numerous conditions from cardiovascular disease and type II diabetes to
erectile dysfunction
and osteoarthritis.
Obesity
may also be associated with numerous cancers, and kidney cancer or renal-cell cancer (RCC) may have one of the strongest correlations to
obesity
compared with cancer at any other site. Almost every epidemiologic investigation has demonstrated an association that tends to affect women more than men, but both genders are impacted. In general, past studies suggest that with increasing weight, a threshold point exists whereby a certain range of body mass index dramatically changes risk. Men and women at the most extreme ends of
obesity
tend to have the highest risk or only risk in past studies. Individuals at the more extreme ends of
obesity
may be affected by an almost indefinite number of mechanisms and exposures that could determine incidence and possibly prognosis. For example, higher estrogen levels, elevated insulin levels, a greater concentration of growth factors in adipose tissue, hypertension, cholesterol metabolism abnormalities, and immune malfunction are just some of the potential mechanisms that may increase kidney cancer risk.
Obese
individuals may also have lower serum levels of vitamin D and engage in less physical activity. Smoking or genetic predisposition to RCC may synergistically contribute to the effect of
obesity
on risk. The potential mechanisms and associations are numerous and complex. Regardless of the actual cancer risk now and in the future, the overall effect of
obesity
on general health is clear, and this should be kept in mind in the discussion between health professional and patient.
...
PMID:Obesity, interrelated mechanisms, and exposures and kidney cancer. 1176 79
The incidence of diabetes mellitus is increasing at an alarming rate, and diabetic men already make up a quarter of the men in our own specific medically-oriented population of
erectile dysfunction
. The incidence of sexual dysfunction in men with diabetes approaches 50%, and this is only slightly lower in diabetic women. Hypertension is a frequent risk co-factor, being seen between 40% and 60% of diabetics in the literature.
Obesity
and hyperlipidemia are other frequent co-factors. Interestingly, these risk factors are the same as those for coronary artery disease. The final common pathway for most of these factors is endothelial cell dysfunction.
...
PMID:Sexual dysfunction in the diabetic patient. 1178 48
Measurement of
obesity
is not as simple as its definition. Currently, several methods of measuring
obesity
are used in clinical studies. Skinfold thickness, crude weight, lean body mass (LBM), body mass index (BMI), and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) are some of the more popular methods, but each contains its inherent strengths and flaws. In general, the results of the largest studies on prostate cancer and
obesity
have not been conclusive. One of the largest studies found an inverse relation to prostate cancer in the youngest age groups. The age and duration of
obesity
or any rapid changes in weight gain, along with other unhealthy exposures, may have some relation to prostate cancer incidence and mortality. Early intrinsic or extrinsic exposure to estrogen or estrogenlike compounds may provide a protective effect. The timing and duration of a higher estrogen and/or lower testosterone exposure may have a beneficial or detrimental impact on the prognosis of an established prostate tumor. Negative exposures over time such as low levels of sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG), a greater exposure to growth factors, elevated insulin levels, greater sympathetic activity, higher cholesterol levels, immune system dysfunction, inadequate diets, smoking status, and other factors may be associated with an increased risk of prostate cancer and other diseases.
Obesity
may also be associated with other cancers for similar and different reasons. For example, morbidity and mortality from postmenopausal breast cancer, colon, kidney, and other cancers are potentially associated with
obesity
. Other comorbidities such as cataracts, coronary heart disease, diabetes,
erectile dysfunction
, hypertension, and others are also associated with
obesity
. The 2 largest prospective studies on BMI and overall mortality have also demonstrated the substantial negative impact of excess weight on society. Prostate cancer risk and
obesity
need further research to establish if a true association exists, but at this time, does it really matter? Overall, the profound adverse effect of being obese on general health is dramatic, and this is what clinicians and patients need to remember.
...
PMID:Is obesity a risk factor for prostate cancer, and does it even matter? A hypothesis and different perspective. 1193 35
Erectile dysfunction
(ED) affects nearly two-thirds of men age 50 and older and is an increasingly common presentation in the primary care setting. A thorough evaluation for ED involves a complete medical history, including a review of medical risk factors such as hypertension, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, renal failure, and medications, as well as lifestyle risk factors such as
obesity
and tobacco, alcohol, and illicit drug use; a detailed sexual history, including assessment of duration of ED, loss of libido, and overall sexual satisfaction; a physical examination; a psychosocial assessment--with particular attention to depressive symptoms; and appropriate laboratory tests. Treatments include medical management of multi-drug regimens, oral therapy, intracavernosal injection, testosterone replacement therapy, vacuum erection devices, and penile prostheses.
...
PMID:Erectile dysfunction. Diagnosis and treatment in older men. 1227 25
Four basic control mechanisms of breathing (brainstem respiratory centre, peripheral and central chemoreceptors, intero- and exteroceptive reflexes and suprapontine influences), as well as their sleep-related disorders are analysed. A decrease in central chemoreceptor sensitivity to CO2 and an increase in upper airway resistance during sleep result in hypoventilation and mild hypoxaemia already in physiological conditions. Compensatory increase in ventilatory effort with synchronous inhibition of pharyngeal dilators during sleep reduces the upper airway lumen manifesting with snoring, upper airway resistance syndrome, and OSA. The resulting hypoxaemia may cause marked cardiovascular, neuro-psychic, endocrine-metabolic and behavioural disorders. The augmented ventilatory effort and hypoxaemia evoke reflex dilation of airways and arousal from sleep, stimulating the sympatho-adrenal system, which provokes autoresuscitation by gasping preventing fatal asphyxia. Failure of this autoresuscitation mechanism seems to cause SIDS. Elimination of voluntary breathing by sleep either in Ondine's curse induced by lesions of respiratory centre, or in congenital central hypoventilation syndrome caused by insufficient central chemoreceptors result in respiratory failure and death. Nocturnal attacks of bronchial and cardiac asthma, lung oedema and other consequences of pulmonary congestion are also discussed. The pathomechanism of extreme daytime sleepiness, chronic fatigue, and disorders of memory, cognitive and other brain functions, are also analysed. Severe cardiovascular consequences of SAS may manifest acutely as angina pectoris, myocardial infarction. dysrhythmias, transient ischaemic attacks and even stroke or sudden cardiac death. OSAS may result also in development of hypertension, central
obesity
, diabetes mellitus,
erectile dysfunction
, depression, and various behavioural disorders.
...
PMID:[Regulation of respiration and its sleep-related disorders]. 1244 39
The Food & Drug Administration has recently approved, or is in the process of approving newer drugs such as the phosphodiesterase inhibitors and apomorphine to treat men's health issues including
erectile dysfunction
. Increasing age results in a gradual hypogonadal state in men, for which different novel delivery systems of androgens are currently offered for the symptomatic patient. As such, many men are presenting to healthcare practitioners for the first time. The age of presentation for
erectile dysfunction
and andropause often overlaps, typically in the fifties and beyond, therefore, it makes sense to screen for
erectile dysfunction
in andropause patients and vice versa.
Erectile dysfunction
is usually a harbinger for other illnesses, such as coronary heart disease and depression. The hypogonadal state, likewise, could be a harbinger for other ill health states in men, including
obesity
, depression, osteoporosis and possibly memory loss. While the newer treatments for
erectile dysfunction
and andropause are distinctly different and targeted at symptom relief, the presentation of the patient with
erectile dysfunction
or andropause offers an excellent opportunity for screening for other health states and health education strategies.
...
PMID:Novel treatment options for overlapping yet distinct erectile dysfunction and andropause syndromes. 1280 83
The objective of this study was to assess the effects of oral testosterone supplementation therapy on glucose homeostasis,
obesity
and sexual function in middle-aged men with type 2 diabetes and mild androgen deficiency. Forty-eight middle-aged men, with type 2 diabetes, (visceral)
obesity
and symptoms of androgen deficiency, were included in this open-label study. Twenty-four subjects received testosterone undecanoate (TU; 120 mg daily, for 3 months); 24 subjects received no treatment. Body composition was analyzed by bio-impedance. Parameters of metabolic control were determined. Symptoms of androgen deficiency and
erectile dysfunction
were scored by self-administered questionnaires. TU had a positive effect on (visceral)
obesity
: statistically significant reduction in body weight (2.66%), waist-hip ratio (-3.96%) and body fat (-5.65%); negligible changes were found in the control group. TU significantly improved metabolic control: decrease in blood glucose values and mean glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) (from 10.4 to 8.6%). TU treatment significantly improved symptoms of androgen deficiency (including
erectile dysfunction
), with virtually no change in the control group. There were no adverse effects on blood pressure or hematological, biochemical and lipid parameters, and no adverse events. Oral TU treatment of type 2 diabetic men with androgen deficiency improves glucose homeostasis and body composition (decrease in visceral
obesity
), and improves symptoms of androgen deficiency (including
erectile dysfunction
). In these men, the benefit of testosterone supplementation therapy exceeds the correction of symptoms of androgen deficiency and also includes glucose homeostasis and metabolic control.
...
PMID:Testosterone supplementation in men with type 2 diabetes, visceral obesity and partial androgen deficiency. 1280 74
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