The normal 3-dimensional structure of the tunica affords great flexibility, rigidity and tissue strength to the penis, which are lost consequent to structural changes in Peyronie's disease.
Objective To investigate whether changes in the structure of the tunica albuginea influence the development of erectile dysfunction.
Patients and methods Biopsy specimens taken from the tunica of 64 patients (both potent and impotent) with and without Peyronie's disease were evaluated. Tissue samples were stained and examined under light and electron microscopy, and the concentration of elastic fibres present in each was measured using computerized image analysis.
Results
The concentration of elastic fibres was lower in impotent than in potent patients (P=0.0365) and was also significantly less in patients with Peyronie's disease. Furthermore, the concentration of elastic fibres decreased with age. Electron and light microscopy revealed the presence of distinct alterations in the tunica albuginea in impotent patients and patients with Peyronie's disease that might interfere with function.
Conclusion The decrease in elastic fibre concentration and changes in microscopic features may contribute to erectile dysfunction by impairing the veno‐occlusive function of the tunica albuginea.
The elastic fibres were unevenly distributed, often forming an irregular network on which the collagen component rested. Elastic fibres were more abundant in the corpus spongiosum, around the blood vessels and surrounding the sinusoid of the corpus cavernosum.
The human penile venous system has been well studied and described but the demonstration of extra venous channels in imaging films prompted us to seek refinement of our anatomical knowledge of this venous system. Cavernosography in 37 patients who had venous stripping surgery and now suffered recurrent erectile dysfunction consistently showed an independent vein, smaller than the deep dorsal vein, running almost in the same position of the deep dorsal vein even though the latter had been removed unequivocally in previous surgery. Cavernosography in 9 patients who underwent intraoperative films also demonstrated the presence of this cavernosal vein in addition to the deep dorsal vein. Meticulous dissection of the penis under the microscope was then performed in 21 male cadavers and we found a cavernosal vein coursing along each corpus cavernosum all the way distally to the glans and draining directly into the Santorini's plexus in 19 subjects. This is in contrast to the previous description that this cavernosal vein was a short vein in the penile hilum. Two sets of para-arterial veins, which have not been reported in the literature, were found to accompany each dorsal artery in all 21 subjects. This more extensive and extra venous drainage might have important implication for venous stripping surgery in the treatment of erectile dysfunction.
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