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Prostatitis and Sexual dysfunction

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Title: Myocarditis Current Trends in Diagnosis and Treatment Author: Lee Ji Eun Last modified by: User Created Date: 6/20/2006 6:20:31 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Prostatitis and Sexual dysfunction


1
Prostatitis and Sexual dysfunction
  • ? ? ?
  • ????? ????

2
Introduction CP/CPPS
  • Most common clinical presentation
  • Recurrent, episodic symptoms
  • One of pain
  • (pelvic, perineal, penile, ejaculatory, lower
    abdomen)
  • Variable irritative obstructive symptoms
  • Sexual dysfunction
  • (usually ejaculatory disturbance)
  • A seriuos impact on quality of life

Krieger JN, et al. Urology 2002 Wenniger K, et
al. J Urol 1996
3
CP/CPPS (past)
Prostate
infection/ inflmmation
4
CP/CPPS (present)
5
EAU classification (2003)
6
Pathogenesis of prostatitis
  • Poorly understand
  • Proposed theories
  • Infection bacterial, viral, fungal,etc
  • Chemical irritation d/t urine reflux
  • Autoimmune theory
  • Cytokine or leukotriene driven or influenced
  • Aberration of people growth factors
  • Biochemical aberration citrate
  • Multi-factorial etilogy

7
Psychological factor to prostatitis
  • An important role in the development or
    exacerbation in both of the chronic prostatitis
    syndromes
  • Berghius JP, et al. J Pshchom Res 1996
  • 51 CP/CPPS patients group vs 34 control group
  • depression and pyschological disturbance are
    common among CP/CPPS
  • Krieger JN, et al. Clin J Pain 1994
  • Common chronic back pain in CP/CPPS patients
  • Chronic back pain caused more somatically focused
    depression and anxiety, resulted in exacerbation
    of the prostatitis

8
Sexual Dysfunction(S.D.)
  • ED
  • Ejaculation
  • Libido
  • Orgasm
  • Cause
  • Many factors exist...
  • But, this condition is usually result of a
    combination several factors coming together

9
MSAM-7 LUTS have a negative impacton sexual
function
Rosen R et al. Eur Urol 2003
IC.ALF.04.06.03
10
Relations between prostatitis and sexual
dysfunction ?
  • Only a few reports of study
  • Not clear and dont know about
  • Suspicous evidence of relations
  • The neurovascular bundles responsible for the
    erectile intimately related to the prostate.
  • The mechanism of urination is similar to erectile
    mechanism of penis related of nerve stimulation.
  • Function of ejaculation is associated with the
    prostate.
  • Androgen affect on sexual function and prostate
    both.

11
S.D. and CP/CPPS There is a coincidence?
  • Blanker MH, et al. J Am Geriatr Soc 2001
  • Surveyed 1600 men in a multivariate logistic
    regression analysis
  • The most correlated factor of E.D.
  • age, LUTS, obesity
  • Diseases of the prostate, prostatitis,
    prostatodynia, BPH, and PCa interfere with E. D.
  • Screponi E, et al Urology 2001
  • Supposes a role for chronic prostate inflammation
    in the pathogenesis of some cases of premature
    ejaculation (Plt0.05)

12
  • Cho IR, et al. Kor J Androl 2007
  • 303 patients with CPPS and 83 healthy control
  • 3 questionnaire demographic data, Korean version
    of NIH-CPSI, IIEF
  • The prevalence rate of Premature ejaculatioin
  • P.E. vs control 217 (71.6) vs 19 (22.9)
  • Significant higher rate in CP/CPPS (P lt0.01)
  • Each mean IIEF domain score is lower than control
  • No difference in the patients with CPPS
    categorized in IIIa and IIIb
  • The rate of premature ejaculation is higher in
    CP/CPPS

13
  • Liang CZ, et al. BJU Int 2004
  • 1786 patients with chronic prostatitis completed
    the survey using the NIH-CPSI and five-question
    version of the IIEF
  • The overall prevalence of sexual dysfunction
  • 49
  • The prevalence of premature ejaculation 26
    erectile dysfunction 15
  • both P.E. and E.D. 7.7
  • The prevalence of S.D. in patients with chronic
    prostatitis was high

14
Higher appearance of chronic prostatitis in men
with infertility
  • Li HJ, et al. Zhonghua Yi Xue Za Zhi 2004
  • 534 patients with male infertility were diagnosed
    with chronic prostatitis at a prevalence rate of
    39.1
  • The prevalence rate of liquefaction dysfunction
    was much higher
  • (22.7 vs 14.3, Plt0.05)
  • however, little influence on the quality of
    semen, pH value, sperm density, and sperm motility

15
Is E.D. a Sx. of CP/CPPS?
  • Krieger JN, et al. Urology 1996
  • Pain symptoms were the predominant urologic
    manifestations of CP/CPPS
  • Ejaculatory pain was also more common among men
    with prostatitis than among men with BPH(P0.07)
    or among men with sexual dysfunction(Plt0.01)
  • Beutel ME, et al. Urologe A 2004
  • In a clinical study of 770 men surveyed in
    Germany SD (ED Libido) was more frequently
    reported by men with pelvic pain than without
    pain syndrome.

16
  • Nickel JC, et al. BJU Int 2005
  • Of 3700 sexually active men with LUTS suggestive
    of BPH,
  • specific prostatitis-like Sx. of pain/discomfort
    on ejaculation
  • -gt 20, clearly differed from LUTS only
  • Of men with painful ejacuation,
  • E.D.72 -gt 91 considered it a problem
  • reduced ejaculation 75 -gt 81 considered it a
    problem
  • BPH and painful ejaculation had more severe LUTS
    and higher prevalence of E.D. and reduced
    ejaculation, than men with LUTS only

17
  • Lutz MC, et al. J Urol 2005
  • The cross-sectional study of associations with
    urogenital pain and sexual function
  • 1764 white men with a median age of 60years
    completed a questionnaire that included questions
    from the NIH-CPSI to evaluate urogenital pain and
    from the Brief Male Sexual Function Inventory to
    evaluate five domains of sexual function.
  • Significant associations of testicular pain with
    impaired sexual drive and sexual satisfaction

18
QoL has a great influence on E.D and CP/CPPS ?
  • Tan JK, et al. 2004
  • across-sectional study to determine the
    prevalence of prostatitis-like symptoms, LUTS,
    and E.D.
  • 1087 men aged 21-70 years
  • Average age of patients with prostatitis-like Sx.
  • -gt 43 years
  • Participants with prostatitis-like Sx. had worse
    E.D. (Plt0.003) and a worse QoL (Plt0.001) than
    those without prostatitis-like Sx.
  • Aspect of QoL seems to be the strongest relation
    between E.D. and CP/CPPS.

19
  • Burber B, et al. Eur Urol 1999
  • The study of men from four different countries
  • Worsening urinary function seen as
    prostatitis-like Sx. causes a global decrease in
    the QoL, thereby negatively affecting sexual
    function
  • E.D. is also strongly associated with a negative
    impact on the QoL

20
  • Mehik A, et al. BJU Int 2001
  • To determine the occurrence of mental distress
    related to prostatitis
  • population-based cross-sectional survey
  • men with symptomatic prostatitis
  • E.D 43, decreased libido 24
  • Psychological stress is common in men with
    prostatitis
  • Tripp DA, et al. BJU Int 2004
  • 463 men were enrolled in the NIH-Chronic
    Prostatitis Cohort Study
  • Depressive Sx. And pain intensity significantly
    predict a poorer QoL in patients with CP/CPPS
  • QoL has a great influence on E.D

21
Conclusions
  • LUTS and BPH are definitely related to SD, but
    there is a little study which influnce of CP/CPPS
    on the incidence of SD
  • Any kind of pain is likely to be the most
    significant Sx. in men with CP/CPPS as it relates
    to SD
  • Supposes a role for chronic prostate inflammation
    in the pathogenesis of some cases of PE
  • SD such as ejaculation discomfort is described as
    a Sx. of CP/CPPS
  • CP/CPPS affects the QoL of a man, then poor QoL
    contributes to or causes SD
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