| Obesity,
smoking increase impotence risk
Anything
that impairs blood vessel function and blood flow could affect erectile
function.
Friday,
July 7, 2006;
NEW YORK (Reuters)
-- Many of the same things that are good for a man's heart may also
be good for his sex life, new research confirms. According to a
study that followed more than 22,000 U.S. men for 14 years.
The findings, published
in the Journal of Urology, help solidify evidence tying lifestyle
choices to ED risk. They may also give men added incentive to make
some changes for the better, said study co-author Dr. Eric B. Rimm
of the Harvard University School of Public Health in Boston.
Among the men Rimm
and his colleagues followed, those who were obese at the study's
start were 90 percent more likely to develop ED than normal-weight
men were. Similarly, smokers had a 50 percent greater risk than
non-smokers.
On the other hand,
regular exercise appeared to protect against erectile problems.
Men who reported the highest exercise levels at the study's start
were 30 percent less likely than their inactive peers to develop
ED over the next 14 years.
At one time, Rimm
noted in an interview, erectile problems were thought to be largely
psychological. But it has become clear that heart disease and ED
share many of the same risk factors, he said.
Anything that impairs
blood vessel function and blood flow could affect erectile function,
and it's known that certain medical conditions that raise the risk
of heart disease -- such as high blood pressure and diabetes - can
also lead to ED.
Similarly, the lifestyle
choices that affect cardiovascular health, for example smoking and
exercise habits, influence ED risk.
This knowledge may
nudge more men to make lifestyle changes, Rimm said, since heart
disease can seem a distant risk, but erectile problems may be more
immediate. In addition, he said, with obesity rates climbing among
young people, the ED risk associated with obesity may increasingly
become apparent at relatively young ages.
Source: Reuters
and CNN
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