Priapism is a rare clinical presentation of a patient with chronic myeloid leukaemia (CML). Herein, we present a young Nepalese man that presented to the emergency department with an acute and painful penile erection for two days. Clinically, he was pale and abdominal examination revealed hepatomegaly. Combined oncologic and initial urological intervention with carvernosal aspiration and intracavernosal phenylephrine failed to achieve detumescence. The patient underwent an emergency corporoglandular shunting eventually. In this case report, we discuss the management compared with previously reported cases.
The quest for improving and maintaining sexual function has been going on since time immemorial. The advent of an effective oral drug, sildenafil, has brought about unprecedented open discussion on male erectile dysfunction, and gas accelerated the pace of development of new therapies for erectile dysfunction. New knowledge in the physiology of sexual function has enabled researchers to target drug treatment at the whole network of the central nervous system and the numerous cascadic enzymatic reactions leading to relaxation of the corporal smooth muscle. One of the brightest potential applications of future molecular technology in the study of erectile dysfuction is in the utilization of gene therapy.