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,
From the * Department of Urology, Suleyman Demirel
University Faculty of Medicine, Isparta, Turkey; and the Departments of
Urology and
Biochemistry, Boston University School of
Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
| Correspondence to: Abdulmaged M. Traish, Institute for Sexual Medicine, Department of Urology, Boston University School of Medicine, 700 Albany St., Rm. W607D, Boston, Massachusetts 02118 (e-mail: atraish{at}bu.edu). |
1.9 nM), as determined by standard radioimmunoassay.
In the second study, a more sensitive enzyme-linked immunoassay was used to
measure the lower testosterone levels. Using this assay, intact rats had a
mean plasma testosterone concentration of 2.02 ± 0.59 ng/mL.
Intracavernosal pressure measurements indicated that orchiectomy resulted in a
significant reduction in erectile function, when compared to intact animals,
whereas testosterone infusion restored erectile function to varying degrees.
Erectile function was maintained by a wide range of systemic testosterone
levels as low as 10%12% of normal physiological plasma concentrations.
Below these concentrations, erectile function was significantly and positively
correlated with testosterone plasma levels in a dose-dependent manner.
Interestingly, prostate tissue mass was positively correlated to plasma
testosterone levels across all concentrations examined. Protein expression of
neural nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) and phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE 5) was
reduced in penile tissue from orchiectomized animals and increased in
testosterone-infused animals, as assessed by Western blot analyses. We suggest
that testosterone at levels approaching one-tenth normal physiological plasma
concentration may represent a threshold value, below which erectile function
declines in a dose-dependent fashion. However, different androgen-dependent
tissues may exhibit varying sensitivities to circulating testosterone with
regard to growth and function.
Key words: Androgens, erection, neural NOS, phosphodiesterase type 5, prostate
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