Depending on the dose required, the patient may easily be spending $40 to $50 per injection
For patients with poor manual dexterity or motor control, the sexual partner can be instructed in the injection technique. Patients who take an anticoagulant or aspirin should compress the injection site for ten minutes after injection.
The use of intracavernous injection therapy is not recommended in patients with sickle cell anemia, schizophrenia, severe psychiatric disorders, severe venous incompetence, or severe systemic disease. Over the long term, 15 to 60 percent of patients drop out for a number of reasons including loss of interest, loss of partner, poor erectile response, penile pain, recovery of spontaneous erection, or ultimately choosing some other type of therapy. Some patients just don't want to use the needle or have an inadequate response to the test dose in the office. The patient acceptance rate of penile injections varies from 50 to 85 percent. In summary, this triple drug combination, known as Tri-Mix, has been shown to be as effective as alprostadil alone, with a somewhat lower incidence of painful erections. No reports of fibrosis were recorded and the prolonged erection incidence was about 5 percent. With longer follow-up, up to 28 months, 65 percent of this group continued to use this injection therapy with an 89 percent satisfaction rate. In this study, 89 percent of the patients had a satisfactory erection and went on to the self-injection protocol at home. Theoretically, in combination a smaller dose of each would be effective, thus avoiding the side effects of higher dosages. Each of these drugs has a different mechanism. In 1991, Bennett, et al., introduced a three-drug mixture containing papaverine, phentolamine, and alprostadil for intracavernous injection.
Thus, while Caverject has been shown to be highly effective in large scale studies, other studies were carried out, looking at other combinations of drugs to help reduce the cost and decrease the painful injection. This is 50 times more expensive than papaverine alone. One of the reasons I encourage patients with significant erectile dysfunction to try intracorporal injection, with any of the above drugs, is that a certain percentage of patients will see a significant improvement in their spontaneous erections and ultimately may not have to use the injection protocol at all.
To make the postage stamp test more accurate | Three additional tests are available | Knowing the history of problems with libido | Examination of the penis may yield a finding | This was both diagnostic and clinically | Diabetes mellitus is a disease of | Again, the importance of a very thorough history | Sometimes, the return to a normal testosterone | At present, there are oral medications | Soon after the surgery he fathered a child | Mr. W was 23 years old and complained | This form of testosterone replacement | Testosterone therapy is contraindicated | This kind of erection problem only requires | This results in their losing control | The experience in the mid-1980s was | Your ability to perform sexually is not a | The primary advantages of papaverine | One recent study reported systemic papaverine | PDE5 - an enzyme found in the penis | This translates into a cost increase combination | Depending on the dose required, the patient | Each of these agents has its advantages | The injection protocol has returned | The prescription refill rate for MUSE has | Even more rare is the patient who | There is no current way to evaluate, diagnose | In nature, these bones begin as a pair | It just gets too crowded to do cystoscopic | The pump, controlled by external squeezing | The three-piece American Medical | If the patient has Medicare or Blue
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