Men who have been diagnosed with erectile
dysfunction are 63 percent more likely to also have had a diagnosis of
migraine headaches than men without the sexual disorder, according to a
new study from Taiwan.
Dr. Tobias Köhler of Southern Illinois
University School of Medicine, who specializes in male sexual function
and fertility, told Reuters Health this is the first he's heard of any
such relationship between migraines and impotence.
"It's an interesting first recognition of
the correlation, but by no means does it mean they're causally linked,"
said Köhler, who was not involved in the new research. It's not clear
what might explain the link between erectile dysfunction (ED) and
headache, although migraines have been linked to sexual dysfunction in
women, the study authors note in the journal Cephalalgia.
But "no study to date has ever attempted to
explore the association between migraine and ED," write Dr. Chao-Yuan
Huang at National Taiwan University's College of Medicine and his
colleagues.
It has been estimated that about 20 million men in the United States suffer from impotence.
The research team collected information on 23,000 men from a national database of insurance claims in Taiwan.
About 5,700 of the men had been diagnosed with erectile dysfunction, which is an inability to get or keep an erection.
Huang's group then compared ED patients to 17,000 similar men who had not sought treatment for impotence.
Among the men with ED, 245, or 4.25 percent, had previously been diagnosed with migraine headaches.
In the group without ED, 457 men, or 2.64 percent, had been diagnosed with migraines.
After the researchers took into account
differences between the groups, including heart disease and diabetes,
they found that ED patients were 1.63 times as likely to have had a
previous migraine diagnosis as men in the other group.
Age seemed to make a difference.
Men in their 30s with erectile dysfunction were about twice as likely as men without it to have a diagnosis of migraines.
The researchers could only speculate as to why migraines are more common among men with erectile dysfunction.
"As it has been demonstrated that chronic
pain can cause sexual dysfunction," the authors write, "one possible
explanation for the association seen in this study may be the chronic
pain associated with migraine headaches."
Köhler, who also represents the American
Urological Association regarding sexual medicine, agreed that pain is a
possible explanation.
"We definitely know that pain in general is bad for erections," he said.
The authors also offer up the brain chemical
dopamine as a potential player, because it is thought to be involved in
both migraine headaches and sexual function.
In addition, there's the possibility that
the findings could be due to some other factor. For instance, men who
see a doctor for migraines might be more likely to seek care for
erection problems too, Huang's group notes.
Or it could be that the men diagnosed with
migraines are taking medications that interfere with their sexual
function, Köhler speculated.
Dr. Ege Serefoglu at Tulane University
School of Medicine said that because this is the first stab at looking
at the relationship between migraine and erectile dysfunction, the
findings should be interpreted cautiously.
He added that the study was well conducted,
but the results "need to be confirmed by other countries, other
researchers, before we can really include migraine as a risk factor of
erectile dysfunction or vice versa.
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