Most erectile dysfunction (ED) is vascular in origin. Because hyperbaric oxygen has been shown to induce angiogenesis (new blood-vessel formation) in other tissues, Hadanny and colleagues tested it in non-surgical ED.
What the study looked at
A prospective analysis followed patients with chronic, non-surgery-related ED through 40 daily HBOT sessions. Clinical effect was measured with the International Index of Erectile Function (IIEF) questionnaire and a Global Efficacy Question (GEQ), with imaging used to assess the penile vascular bed.
What it found
The authors reported improvements in erectile-function scores and imaging evidence of improved penile perfusion, interpreted as HBOT-induced angiogenesis rather than a transient symptomatic effect.
How strong is the evidence?
A prospective, single-arm study without a sham control; the mechanistic (perfusion-imaging) angle strengthens it, but a controlled trial would be needed to rule out placebo and natural variation.
Related on Saturate
See our evidence overview of HBOT for erectile and vascular function.
Source
Hadanny A, et al. (2018). Hyperbaric oxygen can induce angiogenesis and recover erectile function. International Journal of Impotence Research. doi.org/10.1038/s41443-018-0023-9 · PubMed
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