Abstract

A total of 50 patients with erectile dysfunction underwent comprehensive evaluation, including vascular evaluation with penile duplex ultrasonography and papaverine injection, as well as nocturnal penile tumescence monitoring. The latter was performed in a sleep laboratory setting in all patients. The results of penile duplex ultrasonography with papaverine injection were classified as 18 patients with normal vascular findings, 22 with arterial insufficiency, 3 with the pelvic steal syndrome and 7 with isolated venous leakage.Of the patients 15 had normal ultrasonographic and nocturnal penile tumescence findings, 29 had abnormal ultrasonographic vascular and nocturnal penile tumescence findings, 3 had abnormal ultrasonographic vascular findings and normal nocturnal penile tumescence (including 1 with the pelvic steal syndrome as evidenced by penile brachial index) and 3 had normal ultrasonographic vascular findings and abnormal nocturnal penile tumescence (including 2 with neurogenic erectile dysfunction).Penile duplex ultrasonography with papaverine injection appears to be a useful objective method to evaluate vasculogenic impotence and to correlate favorably with nocturnal penile tumescence monitoring. It also may have a higher yield than nocturnal penile tumescence monitoring in patients with the pelvic steal syndrome. While nocturnal penile tumescence is impaired in patients with neurogenic impotence, penile duplex ultrasonography with papaverine injection reveals, as expected, normal findings in patients with neurogenic impotence and normal vascular systems. (J. Urol, 143: 924–927, 1990)

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