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Stent treatment to widen the artery inflow!?

Posted: Tue Dec 04, 2018 5:57 pm
by michaeleurope1
I have read about a new therapy that claims to be successful. I regard any new developments extremely cautious, because nothing is without risks, but... any experiences??

https://www.issm.info/sexual-health-qa/ ... sfunction/

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Can stents help men with erectile dysfunction?
Good blood flow to the penis is essential for an erection. If a man has poor blood flow, he may not be able to achieve an erection firm enough for sex. In other words, he may experience erectile dysfunction (ED).

Sometimes this happens because of atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries), when fatty substances build up on artery walls. These fatty deposits block the pathway and make it difficult for blood to flow through. Atherosclerosis is common in men with heart disease, diabetes, and high cholesterol. It’s also common in obese men.

There are ways to improve blood flow, however, and one way is angioplasty, a procedure that uses stents.

A stent is a tiny mesh tube that supports or widens an artery that has been blocked or weakened. Stents are often associated with heart surgery, but they can be used in other parts of the body, too.

For men with erectile dysfunction, the stent is placed in the internal pudendal artery, located in the pelvis (not the penis). This artery is responsible for blood flow into the penis. The procedure is done on an outpatient basis and usually takes one to two hours.

Stents can be effective, but they aren’t appropriate for all men. Some men cannot have stents because their arteries are already too blocked.

Also, stents are a fairly new treatment for ED. Further research is needed to see how effective the procedure is, especially for the long-term. Possible complications must be studied further as well.

Most men try other ED treatments, such as medications, before considering a stenting procedure.

Re: Stent treatment to widen the artery inflow!?

Posted: Tue Dec 04, 2018 7:46 pm
by dg_moore
I recently saw a vascular surgeon about artery disease in my legs. He said the smaller an artery, the less likely that stenting would be possible or effective. In my case, the occluded areas are low in my legs and hence too narrow to stent. On the other hand, I have a right coronary artery stent that is working very well, but that is a big artery. I'm no expert on penis vasculature, but my guess is that those arteries may be too tiny to stent. Ask a doc!

Re: Stent treatment to widen the artery inflow!?

Posted: Tue Dec 04, 2018 11:32 pm
by thereishope
Hey there op! Those stents are to be placed somewhere but on the penis. I read about it before. There's a few studies on it on pubmed and I think there's more information online on issm. Not sure. Read 2 or 3 years ago about it.

Re: Stent treatment to widen the artery inflow!?

Posted: Wed Dec 05, 2018 2:33 pm
by Bob1974
Sounds good... I could use one about 8 inches long and 6 inches around :D

Re: Stent treatment to widen the artery inflow!?

Posted: Tue Jan 11, 2022 10:10 pm
by Magic Rat

Re: Stent treatment to widen the artery inflow!?

Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2022 2:26 pm
by BrokenPiston
Not clear who it REALLY helps and when. Seems like a surgical intervention (even if as innocuous as a stent on a nearby pelvic artery) could be for naught.

This is from 10 yrs ago but:

“We learned from ZEN that placing stents in the pudendal arteries is feasible, but that erectile function is a complex disease and applying stent therapy just because we can may be jumping the gun,”

https://www.tctmd.com/news/zen-published-pelvic-artery-stenting-helps-treat-erectile-dysfunction-some

Re: Stent treatment to widen the artery inflow!?

Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2022 4:22 pm
by Simbarn
Before atherosclerosis occurs in the pudendal artery and a subsequent narrowing in this artery earlier dysfunctions in the vascular system would have been well under way, serious endothelial damage would have also occurred and most probably smooth muscle loss. This has been known to occur in many man in the erectile tissues themselves first before signs show in the bigger blood vessels elsewhere in the body. By the time a stent may be useful in the pudendal artery supplying the penis with blood, much damage to erectile function would have occurred in the structures than enable expansion in the corpus cavernosum, not to mention narrowing of the cavernosal arteries in the penis itself and earlier endothelial damage to these arteries which cannot have a stent. I doubt it would make much of a difference to erectile function for most. Sounds like the horse has already bolted to me!