News January 2007
Another Reason Not To Smoke In Bed
Smoking causes erectile dysfunction by harming the health of blood
vessels, Finnish researchers report.
Among ex-smokers, erectile dysfunction could signal silent, pre-symptomatic
blood vessel (vascular) disease, Dr. Rahman Shiri of the University
of Tampere School of Public Health and colleagues conclude.
Cigarette smoking has been strongly linked with erectile dysfunction,
with smokers at a 50 percent greater risk than non-smokers of having
difficulty achieving an erection, the investigators note in a report
in the journal Urology.
But the mechanism by which smoking contributes to erectile dysfunction
isn't clear; it could impair penile blood flow, interfere with the
nitric oxide activity essential for erection, or lead to atherosclerosis
(hardening of the arteries), which is known to be involved in erectile
dysfunction.
To investigate, the researchers looked at 1368 men in their 50s,
60s and 70s who completed three questionnaires every five years
from 1994 to 2004.
Men who were smokers in 1994 and developed vascular disease later
on were three times more likely to report erectile dysfunction during
the course of the study than men who weren't smokers at the study's
outset, the researchers found. But smokers who didn't develop vascular
disease were not at greater risk of erectile dysfunction.
Men who reported erectile dysfunction in 1994 and were ex-smokers
were 50 percent more likely to develop vascular disease than those
who had never smoked and didn't have erectile dysfunction at the
beginning of the study.
"Our findings suggest that smoking may cause ED by causing
vascular disease," the researchers write. "ED may also
be regarded as a potential predictor of silent vascular disease
in smokers without clinical signs of vascular disease."
Source http://www.stuff.co.nz/
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