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Effect of erectile dysfunction medications on coexsisting dysfunctions in couples : Partner's Preference Study

journal contribution
posted on 2009-08-01, 00:00 authored by H Conaglen, A Williamson, J Conaglen
There is sparse information on how treatments for erectile dysfunction (ED) affects couples. This study investigated the effects of ED treatments on 100 heterosexual couples' sexual functioning and whether function achieved using a short-acting versus a long-acting ED medication differed significantly. Couples were randomized to use tadalafil or sildenafil for each of two 12-week study phases; they completed questionnaires (International Index of Sexual Function and Female Sexual Function Index) and kept sexual event diaries. All participants experienced significant improvements over baseline sexual functioning, while the men used short- or long-acting ED medications with no significant differences related to the duration of drug action recorded for either the men or women. Despite this lack of difference in efficacy there was a strong preference by women (79%) and their partners (16%) for the longer-acting medication. The reasons for this warrant further investigation. Understanding the effects on couples of the use of ED medications is a necessary aspect of ensuring ongoing sexual satisfaction in couples treated for ED.

History

Journal

Sexual and relationship therapy

Volume

24

Pagination

316 - 332

Location

Abingdon, England

ISSN

1468-1994

eISSN

1468-1749

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2009, British Association for Sexual and Relationship Therapy

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