1.Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors in the treatment of premature ejaculation.
Wei-fu WANG ; Le CHANG ; Suks MINHAS ; David J RALPH
Chinese Medical Journal 2007;120(11):1000-1006
OBJECTIVETo review and assess the update studies regarding selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) in the treatment of premature ejaculation (PE) and then provide practical recommendations and possible mechanisms concerning state of the art knowledge for the use of SSRIs in alleviating PE.
DATA SOURCESUsing the Medline, 48 articles published from January 1st, 1996 to August 1st, 2006 concerning the use of SSRIs and their possible mechanisms in alleviating PE were found and reviewed.
STUDY SELECTIONPE, rapid ejaculation, early ejaculation and SSRIs were employed as the keywords, and relevant articles about the use of SSRIs and their possible mechanisms in the treatment of PE were selected.
RESULTSMany kinds of SSRIs, such as fluoxetine, sertraline, paroxetine and citalopram, have widely been employed to treat PE. However, their effects are moderate and there is no a universal agreement about the kind, dose, protocol and duration. Dapoxetine, as the first prescription treatment of PE, may change this bottle-neck situation. SSRIs are suggested to be used in young men with lifelong PE, and acquired PE when etiological factors are removed but PE still exists. Phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitors (PDE(5)-Is) are suggested to be employed alone or combined with SSRIs when SSRIs fail to treat PE or sexual dysfunction associated with SSRIs occurs. The protocol of taking drugs on demand based on taking them daily for a suitable period is proposed to be chosen firstly. The possible mechanisms include increasing serotonergic neurotransmission and activating 5-hydroxytryptamine 2C (5-HT(2C)) receptors, then switching the ejaculatory threshold to a higher level, decreasing the penile sensitivity and their own effect of antidepression.
CONCLUSIONThe efficacies of the current SSRIs are moderate in the treatment of PE and they have not been approved by the FDA, therefore new SSRI like dapoxetine needs to be further evaluated.
Clinical Trials as Topic ; Ejaculation ; drug effects ; Humans ; Male ; Piperazines ; therapeutic use ; Purines ; therapeutic use ; Serotonin Uptake Inhibitors ; adverse effects ; pharmacology ; therapeutic use ; Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological ; drug therapy ; Sildenafil Citrate ; Sulfones ; therapeutic use
2.Impact of Antioxidant Therapy on Natural Pregnancy Outcomes and Semen Parameters in Infertile Men: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials
Ashok AGARWAL ; Rossella CANNARELLA ; Ramadan SALEH ; Ahmed M. HARRAZ ; Hussein KANDIL ; Gianmaria SALVIO ; Florence BOITRELLE ; Shinnosuke KURODA ; Ala’a FARKOUH ; Amarnath RAMBHATLA ; Armand ZINI ; Giovanni COLPI ; Murat GÜL ; Parviz KAVOUSSI ; Taha Abo-Almagd Abdel-Meguid HAMODA ; Edmund KO ; Gokhan CALIK ; Tuncay TOPRAK ; Germar-Michael PINGGERA ; Hyun Jun PARK ; Ramy Abou GHAYDA ; Suks MINHAS ; Gian Maria BUSETTO ; Mustafa Emre BAKIRCIOĞLU ; Ates KADIOGLU ; Eric CHUNG ; Giorgio Ivan RUSSO ; Aldo E. CALOGERO ; Rafael F. AMBAR ; Channa N. JAYASENA ; Rupin SHAH
The World Journal of Men's Health 2023;41(1):14-48
Purpose:
Seminal oxidative stress (OS) is a recognized factor potentially associated with male infertility, but the efficacy of antioxidant (AOX) therapy is controversial and there is no consensus on its utility. Primary outcomes of this study were to investigate the effect of AOX on spontaneous clinical pregnancy, live birth and miscarriage rates in male infertile patients. Secondary outcomes were conventional semen parameters, sperm DNA fragmentation (SDF) and seminal OS.
Materials and Methods:
Literature search was performed using Scopus, PubMed, Ovid, Embase, and Cochrane databases.Only randomized controlled trials (RCTs) were included and the meta-analysis was conducted according to PRISMA guidelines.
Results:
We assessed for eligibility 1,307 abstracts, and 45 RCTs were finally included, for a total of 4,332 infertile patients.We found a significantly higher pregnancy rate in patients treated with AOX compared to placebo-treated or untreated controls, without significant inter-study heterogeneity. No effects on live-birth or miscarriage rates were observed in four studies.A significantly higher sperm concentration, sperm progressive motility, sperm total motility, and normal sperm morphology was found in patients compared to controls. We found no effect on SDF in analysis of three eligible studies. Seminal levels of total antioxidant capacity were significantly higher, while seminal malondialdehyde acid was significantly lower in patients than controls. These results did not change after exclusion of studies performed following varicocele repair.
Conclusions
The present analysis upgrades the level of evidence favoring a recommendation for using AOX in male infertility to improve the spontaneous pregnancy rate and the conventional sperm parameters. The failure to demonstrate an increase in live-birth rate, despite an increase in pregnancy rates, is due to the very few RCTs specifically assessing the impact of AOX on live-birth rate. Therefore, further RCTs assessing the impact of AOX on live-birth rate and miscarriage rate, and SDF will be helpful.
3.Testicular volume in infertile versus fertile white-European men: a case-control investigation in the real-life setting.
Luca BOERI ; Paolo CAPOGROSSO ; Eugenio VENTIMIGLIA ; Walter CAZZANIGA ; Edoardo POZZI ; Federico BELLADELLI ; Filippo PEDERZOLI ; Massimo ALFANO ; Costantino ABBATE ; Emanuele MONTANARI ; Luca VALSECCHI ; Enrico PAPALEO ; Paola VIGANÒ ; Patrizia ROVERE-QUERINI ; Suks MINHAS ; Francesco MONTORSI ; Andrea SALONIA
Asian Journal of Andrology 2021;23(5):501-509
Testicular volume (TV) is considered a good clinical marker of hormonal and spermatogenic function. Accurate reference values for TV measures in infertile and fertile men are lacking. We aimed to assess references values for TV in white-European infertile men and fertile controls. We analyzed clinical and laboratory data from 1940 (95.0%) infertile men and 102 (5.0%) fertile controls. Groups were matched by age using propensity score weighting. TV was assessed using a Prader orchidometer (PO). Circulating hormones and semen parameters were investigated in every male. Descriptive statistics, Spearman's correlation, and logistic regression models tested potential associations between PO-estimated TV values and clinical variables. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were used to find TV value cutoffs for oligoasthenoteratozoospermia (OAT) and nonobstructive azoospermia (NOA) status in infertile men. The median testicular volume was smaller in infertile than that of fertile men (15.0 ml vs 22.5 ml; P < 0.001). TV positively correlated with total testosterone, sperm concentration, and progressive sperm motility (all P ≤ 0.001) in infertile men. At multivariable logistic regression analysis, infertile status (P < 0.001) and the presence of left varicocele (P < 0.001) were associated with TV < 15 ml. Testicular volume thresholds of 15 ml and 12 ml had a good predictive ability for detecting OAT and NOA status, respectively. In conclusion, infertile men have smaller testicular volume than fertile controls. TV positively correlated with total testosterone, sperm concentration, and progressive motility in infertile men, which was not the case in the age-matched fertile counterparts.