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Erectile Dysfunction

Erectile Dysfunction (ED): Symptoms, Causes, Diagnosis & Ayurvedic Treatment | Samdosh Ayurveda

Erectile Dysfunction (ED)

Medically authored by Dr. Ranjeet Singh Book 1-on-1 Consultation

Summary

Erectile Dysfunction (ED) is a common, treatable condition where a person has persistent difficulty achieving or keeping an erection firm enough for satisfying sexual activity. ED may be situational (only in certain contexts) or generalized; lifelong (since sexual debut) or acquired (developing later). The drivers are frequently a mix of vascular and metabolic issues (blood flow, diabetes), hormonal or neurologic conditions, medication effects, and psychological factors like performance anxiety or depression.

Key insight: ED can be an early warning sign for heart and blood-vessel disease. Improving cardiovascular health, managing stress, and receiving condition-specific treatment often restore both erections and overall vitality.

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What is Erectile Dysfunction?

ED is a consistent or recurrent inability to obtain or keep an erection sufficient for sexual activity. Severity is commonly graded with short questionnaires like the IIEF-5. ED focuses on erection quality and stability. Low desire (libido) and premature ejaculation are separate issues that can co-exist and may need parallel care.

Types: psychogenic (triggered by anxiety, stress, context), organic (vascular, neuro, endocrine, medication-related), or mixed. Distinguishing these helps direct the most effective treatment plan.

Symptoms

  • Difficulty achieving an erection or erections that fade early.
  • Reduced rigidity, especially toward the end of intercourse.
  • Morning erections less frequent or absent compared with earlier years.
  • Worry, avoidance, low confidence, or relationship strain linked to sexual performance.

When to see a doctor

  • ED develops suddenly or progressively over months.
  • You have diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, chest pain, or breathlessness.
  • ED begins after starting a new medicine (some antidepressants, BP drugs, finasteride).
  • Low libido, depression, sleep apnea symptoms, or pelvic/perineal pain are present.

Causes & Risk Factors

Medical Causes

  • Vascular: atherosclerosis, endothelial dysfunction, hypertension, dyslipidemia.
  • Metabolic: diabetes, insulin resistance, obesity, metabolic syndrome.
  • Hormonal: low testosterone, thyroid disorders, hyperprolactinemia.
  • Neurologic: peripheral neuropathy, multiple sclerosis, post-pelvic surgery, spinal injury.
  • Medication-related: some SSRIs/SNRIs, beta-blockers, anti-androgens, 5-alpha-reductase inhibitors, sedatives.

Psychological & Lifestyle

  • Performance anxiety, stress, depression, relationship conflict.
  • Smoking, alcohol excess, sedentary routine, poor sleep or sleep apnea.
  • Porn overuse or conditioned solo patterns with very high stimulation speed/pressure.

Risk Factors

  • Age > 40, family history of cardiovascular disease.
  • Central obesity, elevated triglycerides/LDL, low HDL.
  • Chronic illnesses (kidney/liver disease), long-standing diabetes.
  • Pelvic trauma or surgery (e.g., prostatectomy).
  • Untreated sleep apnea, chronic snoring, or daytime sleepiness.

Prevention & Self-Care

  • 30–45 minutes of moderate activity (walk/jog/strength) on most days; aim for a healthy waistline.
  • Prioritize 7–8 hours of sleep; screen for sleep apnea if snoring/daytime sleepiness persists.
  • Quit smoking and limit alcohol; practice stress regulation (breath work/yoga/mindfulness).
  • Review medicines with your doctor if erection changes began after a new drug.
  • Open partner communication and a collaborative, pressure-free approach to intimacy.

Diagnosis

Evaluation starts with history (onset, severity, morning erections, medical conditions, medications, relationship context) and physical exam (BP, BMI/waist, genital/peripheral pulses, signs of endocrine issues). Depending on your profile, your doctor may order:

  • Blood tests: fasting glucose/HbA1c, lipid profile, morning testosterone, thyroid panel, prolactin if indicated.
  • Questionnaires: IIEF-5 for severity; screens for anxiety/depression when relevant.
  • Cardiometabolic screening: cardiovascular risk calculation and BP control.
  • Special tests (selected cases): penile Doppler ultrasound, nocturnal penile tumescence, sleep study for suspected OSA.

Why this matters: addressing undiagnosed diabetes, thyroid, low testosterone, or vascular disease not only improves erections but also long-term health.

Treatment

1) Skills & Psychosexual Therapy

  • Education & anxiety reduction: shift from performance goals to sensory connection and pace.
  • Sensate-focus program: staged touching without penetration to rebuild confidence.
  • Pelvic floor training: Kegels to enhance rigidity and venous occlusion (see routine below).
  • Conditioning reset: slower, mindful solo practice; reduce high-intensity porn.

2) Medical Options (doctor-guided)

  • PDE5 inhibitors as prescribed. Never combine with nitrates or certain heart medicines.
  • Hormonal therapy when confirmed low testosterone and appropriate after risk–benefit discussion.
  • Devices: vacuum erection device (VED) with constriction ring; effective when pills are unsuitable.
  • Injections/intra-urethral agents (specialist-guided) for non-responders to tablets/devices.
  • Surgery: penile prosthesis when other options fail and a definitive solution is preferred.
  • Comorbidity control: optimize diabetes, lipids, BP, and sleep apnea—core to durable recovery.

3) Ayurvedic Care (Integrative)

Personalized Plan

  • Rasayana & Vajikarana to support shukra dhatu and nervous system steadiness (e.g., Ashwagandha, Shilajit, Gokshura—individualized by doctor).
  • Diet & Dinacharya to balance Vata, reduce metabolic inflammation, and restore stable energy.
  • Panchakarma (as indicated): Basti for Vata balance; Abhyanga + Shirodhara for stress/sleep; Virechana for Pitta/ama clearing.
  • Mind–body routine: breath work, mindfulness, gentle yoga for parasympathetic tone.

Integration Principles

  • Use herbs and routine alongside cardiometabolic optimization for best outcomes.
  • Focus on sleep quality, circadian rhythm, and steady nourishment rather than extreme diets.
  • Couple-centric guidance when fertility goals overlap with ED treatment.

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Medication Overview & Safety

PDE5 Inhibitors (tablets)

  • Work by enhancing nitric-oxide pathways to improve penile blood flow in response to arousal.
  • Taken as needed or daily (depending on the molecule and doctor’s advice).
  • Common effects: facial flushing, nasal congestion, mild headache, reflux.
  • Avoid: nitrates (angina sprays/tablets), some alpha-blockers; discuss all heart meds with your doctor.

When Tablets Are Unsuitable

  • VED device: creates a vacuum to draw blood, with a ring to maintain rigidity.
  • Intra-cavernosal injections / intra-urethral agents: effective for selected non-responders.
  • Prosthesis surgery: considered when other modalities fail or aren’t desired.

Pelvic Floor Routine (How-to)

  1. Find the muscles: stop your urine mid-stream once to identify the right contraction (don’t train during urination).
  2. Technique: contract for 3–5 seconds, relax for 5–6 seconds. Keep abdomen, buttocks, and breath relaxed.
  3. Sets: 10–15 contractions × 3 sets, 4–5 days/week. Gradually progress to 8–10-second holds.
  4. Coordination: practice brief contractions just before penetration or when losing rigidity.
  5. Pairing: combine with diaphragmatic breathing to reduce anxiety spikes.

Myths vs Facts

Myth

  • “ED is just psychological.”
  • “Tablets fix everything; lifestyle doesn’t matter.”
  • “Age makes ED inevitable.”
  • “Porn doesn’t affect erections.”

Fact

  • Most cases are mixed—vascular/metabolic + psychological.
  • Cardio-metabolic health, sleep, and stress control are core to durable recovery.
  • Risk rises with age, but ED is not inevitable; targeted care helps at any age.
  • High-intensity, fast stimulation can condition response patterns; pacing and mindful retraining help.

Need Personalised Guidance?

Educational information can’t replace a medical evaluation. For a confidential, doctor-led plan tailored to your health profile:

Book a Confidential Consultation

Doctors for Erectile Dysfunction

Dr. Ranjeet Singh

BAMS, DMR — Male Infertility & Sexual Health

Focus: ED, PE, male fertility restoration using integrative Ayurvedic and evidence-aligned methods.

Consult Dr. Ranjeet

Dr. Megha Yadav

BAMS — Female Infertility & PCOS/PCOD

Couple-centric care when ED intersects with fertility planning and women’s health goals.

Consult Dr. Megha

Disclaimer

This educational content is not a substitute for in-person medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Medicines/devices mentioned are examples and must be used only under medical supervision.

Written By : Dr. Ranjeet Singh

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