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Drug-Induced PriapismIts Aetiology, Incidence and Treatment

 

作者: Josep E. Baños,   Fèlix Bosch,   Magí Farré,  

 

期刊: Medical Toxicology and Adverse Drug Experience  (ADIS Available online 1989)
卷期: Volume 4, issue 1  

页码: 46-58

 

ISSN:0112-5966

 

年代: 1989

 

出版商: ADIS

 

数据来源: ADIS

 

摘要:

Priapism is characterised by a persistent erection that cannot be relieved by sexual intercourse or masturbation. Although priapism subsides spontaneously in a few days, impotence frequently follows. Both vascular and neural mechanisms are implicated in the pathophysiology of priapism, but it is not clear which initiates the process.Idiopathic cases of priapism are the most frequent (near 50%); other medical conditions that can result in priapism are haematological diseases (mainly sickle cell anaemia and leukaemia), traumatism, and neoplastic processes. Drug-induced priapism comprises about 30% of cases. The drugs most frequently implicated are psychotropic drugs (phenothiazines and trazodone), antihypertensives (mainly prazosin) and heparin. Recently, the intracavernosal injection of vasoactive drugs (papaverine and phentolamine) has been described in patients treated for impotence. With the exception of heparin, an &agr;-adrenergic blocking mechanism has been suggested in the priapism-inducing action of these drugs.A significant number of anecdotal case reports link priapism and drugs, and it is possible that certain cases of idiopathic priapism could be reclassified if accurate pharmacological anamnesis were to be performed.Priapism must be considered a urological emergency. Surgical procedures are the most preferred treatment for this condition but, in selected cases, drug treatment seems to be an alternative approach.

 

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