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  2. Penile artery shunt syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penile_Artery_Shunt_Syndrome

    Penile artery shunt syndrome (PASS) is an iatrogenic clinical phenomenon first described by Tariq Hakky, Christopher Yang, Jonathan Pavlinec, Kamal Massis, and Rafael Carrion within the Sexual Medicine Program in the Department of Urology, at the University of South Florida, and Ricardo Munarriz, of Boston University School of Medicine Department of Urology in 2013.

  3. Penile artery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penile_artery

    Arteries and veins of the penis. The penile artery (also known as the common penile artery) is the artery that serves blood to the penis. It is a terminal branch of the internal pudendal artery, along with the scrotal artery. It subdivides into three arteries, the bulbourethral artery, the dorsal artery of the penis and the cavernosal artery.

  4. Ischemic compression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ischemic_compression

    Ischemic compression is a therapy technique used in manual therapy, where blockage of blood in an area of the body is deliberately made, so that a resurgence of local blood flow will occur upon release.

  5. Venous leak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venous_leak

    Venous leak is an inability to maintain an erection in the presence of sufficient arterial blood flow through the cavernosal arteries of the penis. [6] The defect lies in the excessive drainage of veins in the cavernosal tissue of the penis, which undermines normal erectile function.

  6. Compartment syndrome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compartment_syndrome

    Symptoms of acute compartment syndrome (ACS) include severe pain, decreased blood flow, decreased movement, numbness, and a pale limb. [5] It is most often due to physical trauma, like a bone fracture (up to 75% of cases) or a crush injury. [3] [6] It can also occur after blood flow returns following a period of poor circulation. [4]

  7. Internal pudendal artery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internal_pudendal_artery

    to corpus cavernosum penis/clitoridis The deep artery of clitoris is a branch of the internal pudendal artery and supplies the clitoral crura . Another branch of the internal pudendal artery is the dorsal artery of clitoris .

  8. Penile ultrasonography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penile_ultrasonography

    The dorsal arteries of the penis are located adjacent to the deep dorsal vein and a cavernous artery is located in the center of each corpus cavernosum. On color Doppler, the cavernous arteries present single phase flow. In the flaccid penis (Figure 3), the normal cavernous arteries show a systolic peak between 11 and 20 cm/s.

  9. Helicine arteries of penis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helicine_arteries_of_penis

    On entering the cavernous structure from the deep artery of the penis the arteries divide into branches, which are supported and enclosed by the trabeculae.Some of these arteries end in a capillary net-work, the branches of which open directly into the cavernous spaces; others assume a tendril-like appearance, and form convoluted and somewhat dilated vessels, which were named by Rosenmüller ...