Journal article

Nailfold capillary abnormalities in erectile dysfunction of systemic sclerosis: a EUSTAR group analysis


Authors listKeck, Andrea D.; Foocharoen, Chingching; Rosato, Edoardo; Smith, Vanessa; Allanore, Yannick; Distler, Oliver; Stamenkovic, Bojana; Pereira Da Silva, Jose Antonio; Khelifa, Sondess Hadj; Denisov, Lev N.; Hachulla, Eric; de la Pena Lefebvre, Paloma Garcia; Sibilia, Jean; Airo, Paolo; Caramaschi, Paola; Mueller-Ladner, Ulf; Wiland, Piotr; Walker, Ulrich A.

Publication year2014

Pages639-643

JournalRheumatology

Volume number53

Issue number4

ISSN1462-0324

eISSN1462-0332

Open access statusGreen

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/ket392

PublisherOxford University Press


Abstract

Methods. A cross-sectional analysis of the prospective European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR) Scleroderma Trial and Research database was performed. Men with SSc were included if they had undergone nailfold capillaroscopy and simultaneous ED assessment with the 5-item International Index for Erectile Function (IIEF-5).

Results. Eighty-six men met the inclusion criteria. Eight men (9.3%) had not had sexual intercourse and could not be assigned an IIEF-5 score. Sixty-nine of the 78 men (88.5%) with an IIEF-5 score had nailfold capillary abnormalities, of whom 54 (78.3%) suffered from ED. Nine men (11.5%) had no nailfold capillary abnormalities, of whom six (66.7%) had ED (P = 0.44). ED was more frequent in older men (P = 0.002) and in men with diffuse disease (P = 0.06). Men with abnormal capillaroscopy had a higher median EULAR disease activity than men without (P = 0.02), a lower diffusing capacity of the lung (P = 0.001) and a higher modified Rodnan skin score (P = 0.04), but mean IIEF-5 scores did not differ [15.7 (s.d. 6.2) vs 15.7 (s.d. 6.3)]. IIEF-5 scores did not differ between men with early (n = 12), active (n = 27) or late (n = 27) patterns (IIEF-5 scores of 17.9, 16.3 and 14.7, respectively). There were no differences in the prevalence of early, active and late capillaroscopy patterns between men with or without ED.

Conclusion. Neither the presence or absence of abnormal capillaroscopy findings nor the subdivision into early, active and late patterns is associated with coexistent ED in SSc.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleKeck, A., Foocharoen, C., Rosato, E., Smith, V., Allanore, Y., Distler, O., et al. (2014) Nailfold capillary abnormalities in erectile dysfunction of systemic sclerosis: a EUSTAR group analysis, Rheumatology, 53(4), pp. 639-643. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/ket392

APA Citation styleKeck, A., Foocharoen, C., Rosato, E., Smith, V., Allanore, Y., Distler, O., Stamenkovic, B., Pereira Da Silva, J., Khelifa, S., Denisov, L., Hachulla, E., de la Pena Lefebvre, P., Sibilia, J., Airo, P., Caramaschi, P., Mueller-Ladner, U., Wiland, P., & Walker, U. (2014). Nailfold capillary abnormalities in erectile dysfunction of systemic sclerosis: a EUSTAR group analysis. Rheumatology. 53(4), 639-643. https://doi.org/10.1093/rheumatology/ket392



Keywords


ERECTILE DYSFUNCTIONNAILFOLD CAPILLAROSCOPYSCLERODERMASCLERODERMA PATTERNSystemic sclerosisULCER RISK INDEXVASCULOPATHYVIDEOCAPILLAROSCOPY ASSESSMENT

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 10:18