Not only that erectile dysfunction is something often met in
men with type 2 diabetes, but also the presence of sexual problems in their case may be a significant warning for serious coronary heart disease, two new study
reveal.
While the connection between heart disease and sexual
problems has long been known, the new studies suggest that the development of
erectile dysfunction may precede a heart attack by two to three years, said
Robert Kloner a cardiologist at Keck School of Medicine in Los Angeles, California,
who wrote an accompanying editorial on the studies.
Like coronary disease, erectile disease is a vascular
disease. Heart disease appears when blood flow to the cardiac muscle is choked
off usually because of fatty-plaque build up or clots in the arteries. Erectile
dysfunction appears when blood vessels are damaged, this hindering the surge of
blood needed to sustain an erection. Both heart disease and erectile
dysfunction are prevalent among men suffering from diabetes, which can damage
blood vessels throughout the body.
The first study by Chinese researchers tracked a group of
2,306 men with no evidence of heart disease for four years, including 26.7
percent with erectile dysfunction. At the end of the follow-up period, 123 men suffered
heart attack, died from heart disease, developed chest pain linked to clogged
arteries or needed heart surgery. Men with erectile dysfunction had a 58
percent higher risk of developing heart disease compared with men with normal
sexual performance.
“The development of erectile dysfunction should alert both
patients and healthcare providers to the future risk of coronary heart
disease,” lead author Dr. Peter Chun-Yip Tong of the Chinese
University of Hong
Kong said, as quoted by BBC News.
The second study led by Dr. Carmine Gazzaruso, a specialist
at the Beato Matteo Hospital Group in Vigevano,
Italy involved
291 men in their mid-50s with a history of symptom-free coronary heart disease.
Of 118 men with erectile dysfunction, 30 men or 25 percent suffered a serious
cardiac problem over seven years. Only 19 of the 173 men without erectile
dysfunction or about 11 percent suffered cardiac problems.
Gazzaruso’s study also looked at whether cholesterol-lowering
medications are effective and found that they cut the risk of heart problems by
about a third. However, the study raised the question of whether drugs used to
treat erectile dysfunction, such as Pfizer’s Viagra, Eli Lilly & Co.’s Cialis
and Bayer AG’s Levitra could be just useful for rescuing hearts, as they are for
erections.
The conclusion of the two studies is very simple, experts
say. Men having difficulty achieving or maintaining erections should tell their
doctors immediately even if it’s embarrassing, so they can be evaluated for
further cardiac risk. However, “a lot of men still don’t feel comfortable
talking to their doctor about it,” according to Kloner. This is significantly
important, because once doctors know about their patients’ sexual problems,
they could prescribe more aggressive treatments for high blood pressure and
cholesterol, two clear signs of coronary heart disease.
Additionally, men with erectile dysfunction, especially
those suffering from diabetes, need to have a healthy diet, exercise regularly,
and avoid smoking. According to a 2004 study, men who started exercise in
midlife had a 70 percent reduced risk of erectile dysfunction compared to men
who remained sedentary.
The two studies come at a time when type 2 diabetes is
becoming an epidemic in the U.S.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 21 million
Americans have diabetes and another 54 million have pre-diabetes, a condition
involving higher-than-normal blood sugar levels that often leads to diabetes. The
prevalence of the disease goes up dramatically after age 40. Between 35 and 50
percent of men with diabetes experience erectile dysfunction.
The findings will be published in the May 27 issue of the
Journal of the American
College of Cardiology.