Clinical Trial: Management of Peyronie's Disease With Adipose Tissue Stem Cell
Study Status: Active, not recruiting
Recruit Status: Unknown status
Study Type: Interventional
Official Title: The Role of Adipose Tissue Stem Cell Injection Through Corpora Cavernosa and Intra Dorsal Penile Artery in Management of Erectile Dysfunction Associated With Peyronie's Disease
Brief Summary: Erectile dysfunction is growing in prevalence all over the world and one of the most existing disease in old age patients There is many lines of treatment concerning the status of patient like psychosexual, medical, and surgical treatment But Pyronie's disease is common now among people especially diabetics, and the role of treatment still controversial in results We can start conservative treatment and then surgical treatment if fail but the outcome still not convinced Many patients refuse to fix penile prosthesis and to make operation like nesbite for probability of shortening of penis We start to use stem cell in patients have erectile dysfunction and Peyronie's disease The injection of stem cell will be at corpora cavernosa and intra dorsal penile artery under Doppler device guidance
Detailed Summary: Peyronie's disease associated with erectile dysfunction nan be treated by different methods We start to treat such patients with adipose tissue stem cell Harvesting stem cell from adipose tissue and injected into corpora cavernosa and penile artery and we assess quality of erection through patient history and penile duplex and also assess plaque size and other symptoms related to Peyronie's disease
Sponsor: Man Clinic for Andrology, Male Infertility and Sexual Dysfunction
Current Primary Outcome: sexual function questionnaire [ Time Frame: 2-3 months ]
Original Primary Outcome: Same as current
Current Secondary Outcome: Penile plaque assessment [ Time Frame: 2-3 months ]
Original Secondary Outcome: Same as current
Information By: Man Clinic for Andrology, Male Infertility and Sexual Dysfunction
Dates:
Date Received: January 6, 2014
Date Started: June 2013
Date Completion: July 2016
Last Updated: April 9, 2015
Last Verified: April 2015