Sarcopenia-related traits and erectile dysfunction: a bi-directional Mendelian randomization study
Xu Jianxin, Wu Wensong, Fang Dengpan, Wang Yiwei, Chen Fangmin

TL;DR
This study finds that certain physical traits linked to muscle loss may increase the risk of erectile dysfunction, but not the other way around.
Contribution
The paper introduces a genetic analysis showing a causal link from specific sarcopenia traits to erectile dysfunction.
Findings
Appendicular lean mass increases the risk of erectile dysfunction (OR = 1.097).
Slower walking pace is strongly linked to higher erectile dysfunction risk (OR = 0.325).
Erectile dysfunction does not cause sarcopenia-related traits.
Abstract
Erectile dysfunction (ED) and sarcopenia share many risk factors, but the causal direction of their association remains unclear. To investigate the potential causal relationship between sarcopenia-related traits and ED using genetic data. We conducted a bi-directional 2-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to evaluate the potential causal relationship between sarcopenia-related traits (hand grip strength, appendicular lean mass, and walking pace) and ED. We selected the inverse variance weighted (IVW) method as the main method to assess the causal effect, and we use Cochrane’s Q tests derived from the IVW and MR-Egger method to evaluate the heterogeneity. To investigate horizontal pleiotropy, the study employed MR-Egger and MR-PRESSO methods. Leave-one-out analysis was conducted to assess the influence of individual genetic loci on the outcomes. Specific sarcopenia-related…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNutrition and Health in Aging · HIV-related health complications and treatments · Sexual function and dysfunction studies
