Ralph D J, Hughes T, Lees W R, Pryor J P
St Peter's Hospital, Department of Radiology, London.
Br J Urol. 1992 Jun;69(6):629-32. doi: 10.1111/j.1464-410x.1992.tb15635.x.
Colour Doppler ultrasonography was used to assess 39 patients with Peyronie's disease with a suspected organic cause for their impotence. In 20 patients who complained of a uniform loss of erection, the impotence was likely to be functional in origin (90%) or occasionally venogenic (10%), the penile arterial blood flow being normal. However, patients who complained of distal flaccidity were likely to have an organic cause for their impotence (68%). This was due to proximal arterial disease (10%), plaque involvement of the distal vessels (37%), veno-occlusive dysfunction (5%) or to the soft glans syndrome (16%).