Exercise Can Combat Erectile Dysfunction
August 04, 2003 02:03:05 PM PST, HealthDay
By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter
(HealthDay is the new name for HealthScoutNews.)
MONDAY, Aug. 4 (HealthDayNews) -- Erectile dysfunction is common in men
over 50 and increases with age, but keeping fit seems to counter the problem.
One-third of the men surveyed in a study appearing in the Aug. 5 issue
of the Annals of Internal Medicine reported having problems with an erection
in the prior three months. While the incidence of erectile dysfunction
(ED) increased about 5 percent each year for all men, the problem was
notably less common among men leading healthy lifestyles. For these men,
there was about a 10-year delay in ED.
"There's a clear increased risk of erectile dysfunction as people
age," confirms study author Eric Rimm, an associate professor of
nutrition and epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health in Boston.
"There is a way to delay the onset of ED, and that's pretty significant."
These ways coincide strongly with ways to prevent or delay other health
problems, such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes. That means men
need to rely on the old stalwarts of exercising, keeping your body lean
and not smoking.
"There is an age-dependent increase but, also, modification of risk
factors can affect sexual function. Losing weight, stopping smoking, doing
more exercise are associated with better sexual health," says Dr.
Andrew McCullough, director of Male Sexual Health, Fertility and Microsurgery
at New York University Medical Center in New York City. "We talk
so much about treating, treating, treating. Here we're beginning to see
an increasing body of evidence that we can modify the appearance of this
by changing lifestyle."
Although other studies have looked at ED, this one appears to be the
largest (it involved more than 30,000 men) and it included older men,
up to the age of 90. "Previous studies included very few men over
70," Rimm points out. "With the aging U.S. population, we wanted
to make sure we captured men in the upper age range also." The study
was partially funded by Pfizer Inc., which makes the anti-impotence drug
Viagra.
Rimm and his team looked at 31,742 men between the ages of 53 and 90
who were part of the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study, a group of
male dentists, optometrists, osteopaths, podiatrists, pharmacists and
veterinarians. None of the men was known to have prostate cancer and all
had completed several questionnaires pertaining to their health, the most
recent in 2000.
Thirty-three percent of the participants reported having erectile dysfunction
in the previous three months, with ED defined as the inability, without
treatment, to have and maintain an erection adequate for sexual intercourse.
Less than 2 percent of the men reporting problems said those problems
had occurred before the age of 40, while 4 percent had problems between
the ages of 40 and 49. After 50, however, problems increased substantially,
with 26 percent of men reporting difficulty between 50 and 59, 40 percent
noting it between 60 and 69, and 61 percent of men over 70 saying it was
a problem.
Seventy-four percent of men under 59 reported "good" or "very
good" sexual function, contrasted with only 10 percent of men over
80.
Men who did the equivalent of three hours of running or more each week
or playing five hours of singles tennis reported a 30 percent lower risk
of ED, compared with those who did little or no exercise. Watching more
than 20 hours of television each week, excessive consumption of alcohol,
smoking and being overweight were associated with higher levels of ED,
as was having diabetes, previous stroke or taking antidepressants or beta-blockers.
"Exercise as opposed to sitting on your duff watching TV is clearly
worthwhile," Rimm says.
The bottom line is that risk factors for ED were about the same as those
for heart disease. "One could almost say that erectile dysfunction
may be a good marker for cardiovascular disease because of the tie-in
with these factors," Rimm says.
Rimm hopes that this news may help change behavior. "A lot of people
have known about exercise and obesity and cardiovascular disease and the
message is not getting through. The population is getting more overweight,"
he says. "Maybe people think of cardiovascular disease as too far
off, but ED is much more immediate and affects the quality of life. It's
something that could affect you every day."
McCullough says, "Since ED is intimately associated with the health
of the vascular system, a man needs to have his cardiovascular risk factors
thoroughly examined so that maybe we can do some prevention. This clearly
shows that prevention can affect erectile function.
"If you ask most people about their erectile function, even if they're
overweight, hypertensive and smokers, they'll say 'It's all in my head,'
but their body is screaming out to them. The public message is that the
penis is a barometer of the health of the vascular system and when it's
not working right, you need to listen to that," McCullough says.
The findings may not be entirely applicable to the general population
because the men studied tended to be white, highly educated, have higher
incomes and have better access to health care than the general population.
If anything, sexual dysfunction in the study group was probably lower
than in the overall population.
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