Treating Erectile Dysfunction With Heart Stents
Some surgeons are now using tools typically used to widen arteries and pump more blood to the heart to treat a very different problem: erectile dysfunctionhttp://www.dreddyclinic.com/findinformation/ee/erectiledysfunction.php.
Seventy percent of men with erectile dysfunction http://bit.ly/treatment-for-ed have some form of atherosclerosis http://dreddyclinic.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=30670— arterial blockage — that may prevent blood from flowing to the penis. This is why surgeons are now looking to stent procedures as a treatment for erectile dysfunction, according to cardiologist Mehdi Shishehbor, MD, of Cleveland Clinic.
In the Cleveland Clinic program, if a doctor suspects an arterial blockage is preventing a man from having erections, the first step is to order an angiogram of the pelvis to identify the blockage, then insert a stent into the affected artery. The stented arteries are in the pelvis, not in the penis itself, and the procedure takes about an hour. Some patients are able to have sex the next day.
Erectile dysfunction affects as many as 18 million men in the United States, but not everyone is a candidate for this type of stent procedure. If you think you might benefit from it, talk with your cardiologist for more information.
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