View clinical trials related to Erectile Dysfunction.
Filter by:Erection disorders constitute the first sign of vascular injury in type 2 diabetes patients. The important frequency of these disorders and their consequences in term of quality of life have a strong contrast with the actual interest showed for them by the medical community. Natural evolution of the disease and its management make that these disorders often occur little time after a therapeutic change. As a consequence, patients often accuse their medication to be responsible for the appearance of these disorders. This confusion, associated to false believes that may have the patients on their disease or their treatment, often leads to treatment discontinuation which has a deleterious effect on the disease evolution. Educational therapy programs showed a positive impact on therapeutic adherence. Increasing patients' knowledge on their disease and treatments increases their therapeutic adherence and makes it easier to balance diabetes and therefore limits complications appearance. Educational therapy programs concern today the disease, its process, its evolution, its treatments, their efficacy, their adverse effects but erection disorders are not specifically addressed. This study aims to evaluate the impact of a sexology consultation on diabetes balance measured via HbA1c rate. This consultation aims at precising this particular symptom of erection disorders, without any medicine prescription. The aim is to explain to patients the different links between their symptoms, diabetes, medicines and themselves.
The efficacy and safety of the combination of tamsulosin and tadalafil in men with lower urinary tract symptoms due to benign prostatic hyperplasia and Erectile Dysfunction: a randomized, double blinded, parallel design, active controlled, multi-center, phase 3 clinical trial
A comparative bioequivalence study in 48 healthy male volunteers of oral Viagra and a test sublingual sildenafil wafer.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the correlation between fundus oculi's vascularization in patients with erectile dysfunction and not, and, in the same patients, before and after using drugs for ED.
The purpose of this study is to identify the optimal dose(s) of TD0025 for treatment of erectile dysfunction (phase II) and to investigate if treatment of erectile dysfunction with the optimal dose of TD0025 taken as needed over one month is non-inferior than Sildenafil Citrate taken as needed over one month (phase III)
Sexual function is a part of a normal healthy life and considered to be essential for mental, physical and marital well-being. Any derangement in normal function though is a distressing situation for the individual, is often not reported due to embarrassment or due to social stigma. Sexual disorders in men are categorized according to the stage of sexual response affected in terms of disorders of erectile function, ejaculatory function or libido, albeit there is considerable potential for overlap amongst the disorders. The use of current intervention has many side-effects and has been prohibited in cardiovascular condition and also to be taken with caution with other medical condition. This has led to the development of multiple alternate therapies which are helpful for a limited number of cases but the major concern for all these therapies is their late onset of action and not having a sustained effect.
In diabetics there is an abnormally increased production of AGEs due to hyperglycemia. An association was shown between AGE measured by biopsy (invasive) and DE patients with diabetes (increase of AGE level in the corpora cavernosa). To date no studies have explored the link between DE and the measure of AGE by a non-invasive method of Auto-fluorescence (AF) Skin (AGEReaderTM). If the hypothesis of an association between DE and AGE measured by AF was checked, screening for erectile dysfunction and measurement of AGEs could help to improve the overall management of diabetic patient (including cardiovascular) and their quality of life.
The aim of this study is to determine if patients with ED taking PDE5 inhibitors (e.g. Viagra, CIalis, Levitra, Stendra) and experiencing performance anxiety will benefit using a user-friendly stress reducing phone app, Serenita. The study is internet based with no office visits.
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate changes in erectile function (EF) before versus after 8 bi-weekly treatments of Low-Intensity Extracorporeal Shock Wave Therapy (LIESWT) via IIEF-EF (the Erectile Function domain of the International Index of Erectile Function) scores.
The intent of this clinical study is to answer the questions: 1) is the proposed treatment feasible; 2) is treatment effective in improving the disease pathology of patients with diagnosed diabetic erectile dysfunction.