Clinical data from 37 adult males with diabetes mellitus (insulin dependent, n = 22; non-insulin dependent, n = 15) who had undergone psychiatric diagnosis and peripheral nerve conduction studies were reviewed to determine whether psychiatric illness was significantly related to complaints of sexual dysfunction. Main-effects testing revealed that impotence was associated with both neuropathy (P < 0.01) and psychiatric illness (P < 0.001). Logistic regression analysis was then used to determine the independent relationships of these two variables with impotence. After controlling for the effects of neuropathy, psychiatric illness (generalized anxiety disorder and depression) remained significantly associated with sexual dysfunction (P < 0.01). These data allow for the hypothesis that psychiatric illness may be an important contributor to impotence in diabetic men, as it is in nondiabetic men, even when neuropathic complications of the disease are present.
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August 01 1990
Relationship of Psychiatric Illness to Impotence in Men With Diabetes
Patrick J Lustman, PhD;
Patrick J Lustman, PhD
Departments of Psychiatry and Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine
St. Louis, Missouri
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Ray E Clouse, MD
Ray E Clouse, MD
Departments of Psychiatry and Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine
St. Louis, Missouri
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to Patrick J. Lustman, PhD, Department of Psychiatry, 4940 Audubon Avenue, St. Louis, MO 63110.
Diabetes Care 1990;13(8):893–895
Article history
Received:
December 11 1989
Revision Received:
March 08 1990
Accepted:
March 08 1990
PubMed:
2209327
Citation
Patrick J Lustman, Ray E Clouse; Relationship of Psychiatric Illness to Impotence in Men With Diabetes. Diabetes Care 1 August 1990; 13 (8): 893–895. https://doi.org/10.2337/diacare.13.8.893
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