Treatments and Cures for Erectile Dysfunction
Don’t Feel Down, There’s a New Cure in Town
A man’s ability to have sex is greatly affected by impotence. It is a condition in which an erection cannot be achieved or sustained, due to physical and psychological factors. Nearly 70% of cases of men with erectile dysfunction (ED) attribute it to problems such as diabetes, multiple sclerosis, kidney disease, chronic alcoholism, or heart disease. Other causes found out were severe damage to the cavernosal nerves of the penis which may follow after surgery for bladder or prostate cancer. Also, when a person experiences injury to the penis, spinal cord, bladder, or pelvis, it may possibly lead to ED.
Research performed in the Children’s Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, may have found a solution to repair damaged nerves and give hope of a cure against ED. Tissue engineering has made it possible to grow organs in the laboratory for transplanting to patients who need them. According to the study, while the body of a penis can be grown artificially under lab conditions, it still needs a functional set of nerves before it works properly. In order for the penis to regain sexual function, the damaged nerves can either be regrown from cells and given a new life, or regenerated.
The experiment involved cutting the cavernosal nerves of the penises of 90 rats. At the area where the nerves were damaged, a graft was attached. The graft may be from nerves from other parts of the rat’s body, or from collagen, which is an elastic protein comprising connective tissues in the body. The graft was properly constructed to follow the shape of a nerve, which will allow new nerve cells to regenerate over it. The graft will serve as a scaffold to support the growth of new nerve cells, and eventually heal the initial damage done. The findings of the study were presented to the American Urological Association. Read more
ED Therapy Without Drugs
Beyond the Drugs: Is there Therapy for ED?
In the United States, over 30 million men experience erectile dysfunction (ED). Medical experts say that ED is a combination of many physical as well as psychological factors. Most of the drugs available commercially, like Viagra, Cialis, and Levitra, are made to target the physical hurdle of ED. But for some men, the drugs just don’t seem to work for them. So the question is: Is there therapy for ED?
The answer is yes. If physical elements of ED can’t be solved, then the mental causes can. A survey done in 2001 by the Cochrane Collaboration, an international organization which provides reviews and information on healthcare interventions, found out that about 43% of the studied men had ED because of physical factors, 43% had ED due to psychological factors, and the rest attribute their ED to both.
In some cases, doctors recommend a patient to undergo psychotherapy, when a patient experiences ED because of anxiety or low self-esteem towards sex. This is done to relieve the stress associated with ED or when undergoing other treatments for ED. Other times, the man’s partner undergoes psychotherapy as well, so both can benefit from techniques to improve their lovemaking and overcome ED. Read more


