Season 1 Episode 208
A respiratory virus shouldn’t derail sexual health months later—yet for many men, long COVID does exactly that. We dig into the hidden chain reaction that links SARS-CoV-2 to erectile dysfunction: viral entry through ACE2 and TMPRSS2, a crashed renin-angiotensin system, widespread endothelial injury, and a surprising hit to the testes that drives low testosterone despite elevated LH. The picture that emerges is not simple fatigue or stress; it’s a multi-system disruption that demands careful sequencing and specialized care.
We walk through the science in plain language, connecting endothelial dysfunction to impaired blood flow, and mapping how a smoldering inflammatory state and autonomic neuropathy keep vessels tense and unresponsive. Then we zoom in on hormone data from younger men with mild initial illness who later developed ED, showing clinically meaningful drops in total and free testosterone and lower SHIM scores. These findings point to testicular injury rather than a purely central signaling problem, reframing how we evaluate and treat men who feel “too young” for ED.
Most urgent is our caution on reflexive testosterone therapy. Early research suggests that raising androgens can upregulate the very cellular doorways the virus uses, potentially worsening instability. Instead of chasing numbers, we outline a root-cause plan: restore endothelial health, reduce inflammation and oxidative stress, stabilize blood pressure and autonomic tone, and only then reassess hormones with a full panel before considering carefully monitored TRT. Along the way, we share practical steps for smarter diagnostics and why symptom-only fixes like PDE5 inhibitors rarely deliver lasting results.
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Published on 1 week ago
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