Erectile Dysfunction Tied To Long Term Painkiller Use

Posted: Published on May 17th, 2013

This post was added by Dr P. Richardson

Featured Article Academic Journal Main Category: Erectile Dysfunction / Premature Ejaculation Also Included In: Back Pain;Pharmacy / Pharmacist Article Date: 16 May 2013 - 4:00 PDT

Current ratings for: Erectile Dysfunction Tied To Long Term Painkiller Use

Lead author Richard A. Deyo, an investigator with the Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research says in a statement:

"Men who take opioid pain medications for an extended period of time have the highest risk of ED."

With his colleagues, Deyo, who is also Professor of Evidence-based Family Medicine at Oregon Health & Science University, found the link by analyzing electronic health records of over 11,000 men enrolled in a health plan.

They believe theirs is the first study to find such a link using electronic health records.

The reason they did the study was because men with chronic pain sometimes experience erectile dysfunction because of depression, smoking, age, or opioid-related hypogonadism (low testosterone due to painkiller use).

But little is known, they note, about how common ED is in men with back pain, and which risk factors may be important.

So they searched the electronic records to find out if men taking prescription painkillers were also the ones most likely to be prescribed testosterone replacement or medications for ED.

They found 11,327 men in Oregon and Washington enrolled in the Kaiser Permanente health plan who went to see their doctor complaining of back pain in 2004.

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Erectile Dysfunction Tied To Long Term Painkiller Use

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