INTRODUCTIONPriapism, an involuntary and usually painful penile erection, is a major problem in patients with homozygous sickle cell (SS) disease, and is most common in adolescence and early adult life. There are two principal patterns, stuttering episodes and major attacks. Stuttering episodes are predominantly nocturnal, last three to four hours, are relieved by simple physical procedures such as cold showers or exercise, and patients maintain normal erectile function. Major attacks last more than six hours and sometimes for several days, are often excruciatingly painful, and tend to be followed by permanent damage to the vascular erectile system and impotence. Stuttering episodes are inconvenient since they interfere with sleep and lead to daytime sleepiness but, more seriously, may be a prodrome for major attacks. These events are under-reported partly because of embarrassment but also because patients do not realize that they are caused by sickle cell disease. It is therefore good practice in the management of sickle cell disease to question patients directly about these events, and routine questionnaires found these events in 40% of post-pubertal males attending sickle cell clinics (1, 2). A large bibliography has accumulated on priapism in sickle cell disease but most are case reports or small series focussing on risk factors and treatment of priapism. Almost all of this experience has been derived from symptomatically acquired patients with many inherent biases. In a representative sample of patients followed from birth, there is little information on the prevalence of stuttering or major attacks, the relationships between these events and their final outcome in terms of erectile function. This information has now been provided in the Jamaican Cohort Study where, following newborn diagnosis, patients have been systematically reviewed for the last 33−40 years.