A Positive Intracavernous Injection Test Implies Normal Veno-Occlusive but Not Necessarily Normal Arterial Function: A Hemodynamic Study
- 1 May 1994
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Urology
- Vol. 151 (5) , 1209-1216
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s0022-5347(17)35215-1
Abstract
During impotence evaluations a positive intracavernous injection test has been presumed to signify normal erectile hemodynamics. This premise was tested by obtaining hemodynamic data in 80 patients 17 to 65 years old with positive injection tests: patients achieved maximal circumference responses and equilibrium intracavernous pressures of 80 mmHg or more (range 80 to 136) sustained for 30 minutes or longer. Corporeal veno-occlusive testing revealed that flow-to-maintain (0.5 to 3 ml. per minute) and pressure decay (0 to 47 mmHg) values as well as pharmaco-cavernosography findings (absent or minimal contrast medium in venous structures in 92% of the cases) were all consistent with low outflow erection states. Arterial testing revealed right and/or left cavernous systolic arterial blood pressures always at 80 mmHg or more, consistent with a prerequisite cavernous artery pressure value for a positive injection test. Systemic-cavernous systolic arterial blood pressure gradients were 0 to 24 mmHg, 25 to 34 mmHg and 35 mmHg or more in 47 (59%), 18 (22%) and 15 (19%) patients, respectively. Large systemic-cavernous pressure gradients suggested the presence of arterial occlusive disease. In 8 patients with positive injection tests and gradients of 35 mmHg or more pharmaco-arteriography revealed hemodynamically significant arterial occlusions. In conclusion, hemodynamic data in selected patients with positive injection tests revealed low outflow erection states, threshold cavernous artery pressures and disparities in systemic-cavernous systolic pressure gradients that suggested arterial disease in 19% of the cases. The erectile response in a positive test is equal to or greater than a threshold response, not always the maximum response as determined by the systemic blood pressure. A positive intracavernous injection test did not necessarily signify normal erectile hemodynamics.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Hemodynamic Pathophysiology of Impotence Following Blunt Trauma to the Erect PenisJournal of Urology, 1992
- A Dynamic Dual Isotope Radionuclear Method of Quantifying Penile Blood FlowJournal of Urology, 1992
- Comparison of the Diagnostic Value of Pump and Gravity Cavernosometry in the Evaluation of the Cavernous Veno-Occlusive MechanismJournal of Urology, 1991
- Cigarette Smoking: An Independent Risk Factor for Atherosclerosis in the Hypogastric-Cavernous Arterial Bed of Men with Arteriogenic ImpotenceJournal of Urology, 1991
- Impotence: A patient's goal-directed approach to treatmentWorld Journal of Urology, 1990
- ImpotenceNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- Cavernosal venocclusive insufficiency in male impotence: evaluation of degree and location.Radiology, 1987
- Characterization of Penile Erectile States Using External Computer-Based MonitoringJournal of Biomechanical Engineering, 1987
- Vasculogenic impotence evaluated by high-resolution ultrasonography and pulsed Doppler spectrum analysis.Radiology, 1985
- Intracavernous Injection of Papaverine as a Diagnostic and Therapeutic Method in Erectile FailureAngiology, 1984