"I really feel that small clinics are particularly dark now. For a little money, we don't care about benevolence and morality. The day before yesterday, I saw that there was a child upstairs who also had a runny nose. It wasn't a big deal, so I went to the small clinic with both infusion and injection. After working all day, the child was struggling and was even more serious. So, if there's anything wrong, don't go to the small clinic, go to the hospital. So impotence is even more important. The inspection of impotence in large hospitals is more comprehensive."
Examination of impotence - special examination
Special examinations include nighttime penile erection and stiffness testing (NPT), endocrine function testing, and cavernous injection of vasoactive drugs to induce erectile dysfunction (ICI). In particular, ICI can preliminarily determine the ability to maintain penile vascular perfusion and the functional integrity of cavernous smooth muscle, thereby evaluating the cavernous closure mechanism. Low doses of vasoactive substances can induce full penile erection, and this test is particularly suitable for the diagnosis of vascular impotence. At the same time, the penile cavernous body test combined with other clinical examinations can distinguish between neurological and psychological impotence.
Examination of impotence -- physical examination
A comprehensive systematic examination was conducted for each patient, focusing on the development of the reproductive system, secondary sexual signs, and cardiovascular and neurological examinations. Abnormal development of the reproductive system and secondary sexual characteristics often indicates primary or secondary hypogonadism and endocrine erectile dysfunction caused by pituitary lesions. Unclear contact of the dorsalis pedis artery or loss of bulbocavernosus muscle reflex, and perineal sensory retardation indicate the possibility of vascular or neurological erectile dysfunction.
Examination of impotence - laboratory examination
Routine blood and urine tests, liver and kidney functions, as screening tests, focus on blood sugar and urine sugar: diabetes often causes vascular and neurological damage, and about 1/2 of diabetes patients have erectile dysfunction complications
Well, impotence seems to be quite serious. So once you discover that you may have impotence, don't procrastinate. You should hurry to the hospital. Don't go to a small clinic. You should go to a large hospital for an impotence examination. Small clinics generally don't have those machines, so the examination is not in place. Go to a large hospital for early treatment and early recovery