Erectile dysfunction and. . .

The articles looks at the relationship between erectile
dysfunction and cardiovascular diseases, diabetes and depression. It concludes
that treating ED as a symptom of more serious conditions is an effective
preventative strategy. Similarly, curing ED can be a cure of secondary
depression.

This article is going
to move around in time a little but, as always, to a purpose. There has been a
long line of studies examining the relationship between erectile dysfunction
(ED) and other conditions. In 2006, a piece of metaresearch was concluded, i.e.
a study that examines the existing published research to look for a balance of
evidence.

The theme was the
relationship between endothelial dysfunction which is the most common
underlying cause of ED, and hyperlipidemia, cardiovascular disease, high blood
pressure and heart disease. It confirmed a strong signal to the medical
profession that should you appear for a consultation with ED, the physician
should not routinely prescribe , 90.9% of those with untreated depression reported a significant
improvement in the quality of their lives. This would seem good evidence that
successful treatment of the ED removes it as a cause of secondary depression.
It is not good evidence that Viagra itself (or the other PDE-5 inhibitors
Cialis and Levitra) alters mood. You always have to do that for yourselves.

 

About the author

Keegan Segal is a writer for ManOfPeople . Read more  details on the subject of this article here: http://blog.manofpeople.com/archives/56

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