Objectives: To investigate whether vasculogenic erectile dysfunction (ED) severity and the clinical response to vardenafil were associated with structural and functional vascular changes in patients with uncomplicated hypertension.
Methods: Sexually active hypertensive men (n = 100), aged 50-70 years, completed the International Index of Erectile Function, Erection Function Domain (IIEF-EF) and were divided into 2 groups: 74 men with mild to moderate, moderate, or severe ED (IIEF-EF score ≤18) and without major cardiovascular disease and 26 controls (IIEF-EF score ≥25). Clinical and laboratory evaluations were performed, followed by measurement of the carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) and brachial flow-mediated dilation (FMD) before 4 attempts with 20 mg of vardenafil. The responders had ≥50% positive answers on sexual encounter profile question 3.
Results: The carotid IMT was significantly greater and the FMD was significantly lower in patients with ED than in the control patients. The baseline IIEF-EF score correlated negatively with the carotid IMT (r = -0.48, P < .001) and with the Framingham score (r = -0.41, P < .001) among those with ED. After multivariate logistic regression analysis, the baseline IIEF score was independently and only associated with the carotid IMT (β = 6.105, P = .019). Responders were younger, had a lower cardiovascular risk profile and carotid IMT, and greater baseline IIEF-EF score and FMD than did the nonresponders. On logistic regression analysis, the response to vardenafil was independently associated with the brachial FMD (β = 1.085, P = .002).
Conclusions: In hypertensive men with vasculogenic ED and no other clinical evidence of arteriosclerosis, the ED severity correlated with the carotid IMT, and phosphodiesterase-5 effectiveness correlated with brachial FMD.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.