Cover Page

Male Sexual Dysfunction

A Clinical Guide

 

EDITED BY

Suks Minhas MD, FRCS(Urol)

Consultant Urologist

University College Hospital

London, UK

John Mulhall MD, MSc, FECSM, FACS

Memorial Sloan‐Kettering Cancer Center

New York, USA

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wiley_Logo

List of contributors

James Bellringer
Parkside Hospital
London, UK

Catherine Benedict
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
New York, USA

Pierre‐Marc G. Bouloux
The Royal Free Hospital
London, UK

Gerald Brock
St Joseph’s Health Sciences Centre; and Lawson Health Research Institute
London, ON, Canada

Culley Carson
University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill, NC, USA

Lizzie Chandra
St James Hospital, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust
Leeds, UK

Kelly A. Chiles
George Washington University
Washington, DC, USA

Eric Chung
Princess Alexandra Hospital
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Giovanni Corona
Maggiore‐Bellaria Hospital Bologna, Italy

Victoria Dawson
University Hospital Southampton
Southampton, UK

Ian Eardley
Leeds Teaching Hospital Trust
Leeds, UK

Mark Emberton
University College Hospital
London, UK

Francisco J. Garcia
University of Western Ontario;
St Joseph’s Health Sciences Centre;
Lawson Health Research Institute
London, ON, Canada

Angela Gregory
Nottingham University Hospital
Nottingham, UK

Geoffrey Hackett
University of Bedfordshire, Luton, UK
Good Hope Hospital,
Sutton Coldfield, UK

Paul K. Hegarty
Mater Private Hospital
Mahon, Cork, Ireland

Wayne J.G. Hellstrom
Tulane University
New Orleans, LA, USA

Graham Jackson
Guy’s and St Thomas’ Hospitals NHS Trust
London, UK

Salim Janmohamed
University College London
London, UK

Ates Kadioglu
Istanbul Faculty of Medicine, Istanbul University
Istanbul, Turkey

Jas Kalsi
Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust and Imperial College
Healthcare, London, UK

Oliver Kayes
St James Hospital, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust
Leeds, UK

Mohit Khera
Baylor College of Medicine
Houston, TX, USA

Michael Kirby
The Prostate Centre
London, UK

Alex Kirkham
University College Hospital London
London, UK

Stephen Larsen
University College Hospital London
London, UK

Chi‐Ying Li
University College Hospital London
London, UK

Marc Lucky
Aintree University Hospital
Liverpool, UK

Tom F. Lue
University of California
San Francisco, CA, USA

Mario Maggi
University of Florence
Florence, Italy

Martin Miner
Brown University
Providence, RI, USA

Suks Minhas
University College Hospital
London, UK

Caroline Moore
University College Hospital
London, UK

John Mulhall
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
New York, NY, USA

Asif Muneer
University College Hospital London
London, UK

Christian J. Nelson
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
New York, USA

Jalesh N. Panicker
The National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery and UCL Institute of Neurology
London, UK

Alexander W. Pastuszak
Baylor College of Medicine
Houston, TX, USA

Mark Paulos
Brown University
Providence, RI, USA

David Ralph
University College Hospital London
London, UK

Tina G. Rashid
Charing Cross Hospital
London, UK

Rowland Rees
University Hospital Southampton
Southampton, UK

Ashley Ridout
University College Hospital
London, UK

Emre Salabas
Istanbul Faculty of Medicine, Istanbul University
Istanbul, Turkey

Varun Sahdev
University College Hospital London
London, UK

Patrick Selph
University of Alabama at Birmingham
Birmingham, AL, USA

Majid Shabbir
Guy’s Hospital
London, UK

Alan Shindel
UC Davis
Sacramento, CA, USA

C.J. Shukla
Western General Hospital, NHS Lothian
Edinburgh, UK

Vikram Soni
Baylor College of Medicine
Houston, TX, USA

Conrad von Stempel
University College Hospital
London, UK

Raanan Tal
Rambam Healthcare Campus
Haifa, Israel

Ronny B.W. Tan
Tan Tock Seng Hospital, Singapore

Phillip Thomas
Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust, Brighton, UK
Parkside Hospital, London, UK

Katarina Ivana Tudor
Department of Neurology, University Hospital Center Zagreb
Zagreb, Croatia

Linda Vignozzi
University of Florence, Florence, Italy

Marcel D. Waldinger
Drexel University College of Medicine
Philadelphia, PA, USA

Miles Walkden
University College Hospital
London, UK

Dan Wood
University College Hospital
London, UK

Michael Grant Wyllie
Global Pharma Consulting
Banbury, UK

Tet Yap
St George’s Hospital
London, UK

Andrew Yates
Leeds & York Partnership NHS Foundation Trust
Leeds General Infirmary
Leeds, UK

Lindsay Yuh
UC Davis
Sacramento, CA, USA

Uwais B. Zaid
University of California
San Francisco, USA

Xiaoyu Zhang
University of California
San Francisco, USA

Foreword

This is a very important book. Its importance lies in the fact that male sexual health is these days central to very many men’s quality‐of‐life. Male sexual dysfunction, resulting from aging or some disease process, such as diabetes, can therefore have serious, and often underestimated, repercussions. Men, particularly as they age, are extremely dependent on a lasting relationship with their partner for their well‐being. In general, single or divorced men have a lower quality‐of‐life and higher risk of mortality than those who sustain their relationships in the longer term. Marital breakdown, which may be the consequence of male sexual dysfunction, can also have an impact on the next generation. The financial and emotional strains resulting from a fractured relationship may take a significant toll on the children, as well as on the two conflicted adults themselves.

As populations around the world age and increase, the incidence of male sexual dysfunction is set to rise and rise. Fortunately, as so well described in this book, its management has been transformed over the last 20 years by the advent of safe and effective pharmacotherapy, and, in selected cases, specialized andrological surgery. Viagra is still the world’s most instantly recognizable pharmaceutical brand, and is now much more affordable in its generic form: sildenafil. However, counterfeit products, often containing hazardous ingredients, are unfortunately increasingly available, often over the internet, and have recently been associated with several deaths in the Far East. Intracavernosal injection therapy, pioneered originally by the impressive Professor Giles Brindley, has an increasingly important role to play in the more difficult‐to‐treat men, who are usually either post‐pelvic surgery or longstanding diabetics. The third‐line treatment for refractory cases of erectile dysfunction by implantation of inflatable or semi‐rigid penile implants, which, provided that it is skillfully performed, can yield excellent results, is also well described in this excellent volume, along with other specialized surgical procedures for Peyronie’s disease and other andrological conditions that can impact negatively on sexual function.

After many years in the wilderness “men’s health” is at last beginning to take center stage. Sexual health is central to a man’s self‐esteem and well‐being. I have high hopes that this book, edited by two of the world’s leading experts in the specialty, which I whole‐heartedly commend to you, will be widely read, not only by those with a special interest in male sexual health, but also by generalists and family practitioners, as well as nurse specialists. Only by improving the lamentably deficient knowledge about the safe and effective treatment options now available for the very many men who are affected by male sexual dysfunction, will their lives be improved and their relationships preserved. This is undoubtedly a most laudable ambition.

Roger Kirby
The Prostate Centre
London
W1G8GT