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| Male Impotence Causes
Since an
erection requires a precise sequence of events, impotence can occur when any of the
events is disrupted. The sequence includes nerve impulses in the brain,
spinal column, and area around the penis, and response in muscles, fibrous
tissues, veins, and arteries in and near the corpora cavernosa.
Damage to
nerves, arteries, smooth muscles, and fibrous tissues, often as a result of
disease, is the most common cause of impotence. Diseases such as diabetes, kidney
disease, alcoholism, multiple sclerosis, atherosclerosis, vascular
disease, and neurologic disease account for about 70% of impotence cases.
Between 35 and 50% of men with diabetes experience impotence.
Surgery (especially radical prostate and bladder surgery for cancer) can
injure nerves and arteries near the penis, causing impotence. Injury to the penis,
spinal cord, prostate, bladder, and pelvis can lead to impotence by harming nerves,
smooth muscles, arteries, and fibrous tissues of the corpora cavernosa.
In
addition, many common medicines--blood pressure drugs, antihistamines,
antidepressants, tranquilizers, appetite suppressants, and cimetidine (an
ulcer drug)--can produce impotence as a side effect.
Experts
believe psychological factors such as stress, anxiety, guilt,
depression, low self-esteem, and fear of sexual failure causes 10 to 20% of impotence cases. Men with a physical cause resulting in impotence frequently experience
these psychological reactions (stress, anxiety, guilt,
depression).
Other causes include smoking, which affects blood flow,
and hormonal issues, such as low testosterone.
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