The Relationship Between Femoral Head Avascular Necrosis and Erectile Dysfunction: A Retrospective Case–Control Study Conducted in Türkiye
Ekrem Özdemir, Ahmet Alper Özdeş, Fatih Emre Topsakal, Nasuhi Altay, Hüseyin Utku Özdeş, Esra Demirel

TL;DR
This study found a strong link between worsening femoral head avascular necrosis and increased severity of erectile dysfunction in men.
Contribution
The study is the first to demonstrate a significant correlation between FAN stages and ED severity using a case–control design.
Findings
35 out of 50 FAN patients had ED, compared to 15 out of 50 controls, with a statistically significant difference (p < 0.05).
A strong negative correlation (Spearman’s rho = −0.631) was found between FAN stages and IIEF scores.
IIEF scores dropped from 23.4 in stage 1 FAN to 9.6 in stage 4 FAN, showing worsening erectile function.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Femoral head avascular necrosis (FAN) is a serious orthopedic disorder that causes the death of bone tissue as the outcome of the occlusion or insufficiency of the vessels supplying blood to the femoral head. It is especially common in middle-aged men. Factors such as alcohol consumption, corticosteroid use, trauma, and systemic diseases have influential roles in the development of FAN, and the ensuing vascular disruptions can also negatively affect the patient’s broader systemic vascular health. Erectile dysfunction (ED) is a condition caused by an impairment in penile blood flow, which reduces quality of life in men and has psychosocial effects. This study examined the potential relationship between FAN and ED in consideration of the similar pathophysiological mechanisms of these conditions. Methods: The research was planned as a retrospective case–control study…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBone and Joint Diseases · Hip disorders and treatments · Orthopedic Infections and Treatments
