Diabetic Neuropathy and Erectile Dysfunction: Unveiling the Neural Pathways Behind a Vascular Symptom
Virginia Zamponi, Rossella Mazzilli, Stefano Balducci, Antongiulio Faggiano, Jonida Haxhi

TL;DR
This paper explores how diabetic neuropathy contributes to erectile dysfunction, suggesting a shift in understanding from purely vascular causes to a neurovascular perspective.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive review linking diabetic neuropathy to erectile dysfunction through neurovascular mechanisms.
Findings
Diabetic neuropathy significantly contributes to erectile dysfunction through impaired sensory conduction and reflex pathways.
Molecular mechanisms like oxidative stress and reduced BDNF are key in linking diabetes to neurovascular dysfunction.
Current therapies like PDE5 inhibitors show reduced effectiveness in patients with significant neuropathy.
Abstract
Erectile dysfunction (ED) is one of the most prevalent and disabling complications of diabetes mellitus (DM), thought to arise from the interaction of metabolic, vascular, and neural injury. Recent evidence indicates that diabetic neuropathy, affecting both somatic and autonomic pathways, plays a central role in the development of ED and is strongly associated with increased disease burden. Early neurophysiological studies documented impaired penile sensory conduction and abnormalities of sacral reflex pathways in diabetic men with ED, while more recent investigations have confirmed the contribution of cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy and small-fibre loss. At the molecular level, oxidative stress, advanced glycation end-product signalling, impaired nitric oxide bioavailability, and reduced neurotrophic support, particularly involving brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), emerge…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSexual function and dysfunction studies · Pain Mechanisms and Treatments · Phosphodiesterase function and regulation
