What Causes Erectile Dysfunction (and How It’s Evaluated via Telehealth)
Erectile dysfunction (ED) is a common men’s sexual health concern, and it can happen at different ages for different reasons. Yet many men wait too long to ask about it because the topic feels personal.
Telehealth has changed that. You can now discuss symptoms and treatment options with a trusted provider in a more private, convenient setting. However, before you get to treatment, it’s important to understand what can cause ED and how a provider may evaluate it in an online setting.
What ED Actually Means
If you struggle with ED, it means you have ongoing trouble getting or keeping an erection firm enough for sex. One difficult night does not automatically count as ED. Factors like stress and poor sleep can occasionally affect performance. ED becomes more relevant when the problem keeps happening or starts affecting your quality of life.
Struggling to maintain an erection can stem from physical, mental, or emotional causes, or a mix of all three. That is why a good evaluation looks beyond just one symptom. Any health provider, whether you meet in person or via telehealth, wants to understand your overall health, your habits, and the pattern of what is happening.
Common Causes of ED
Physical Health
Getting and keeping an erection depends on several systems working together, including blood flow, nerve signals, and hormones. If one of those systems is off, it can affect your ability to perform.
You may be more likely to experience ED if you have or struggle with any of the following:
- High blood pressure
- Diabetes or blood sugar problems
- High cholesterol
- Obesity
- Low testosterone
- Side effects from certain medications
- Smoking
- Poor sleep, including sleep apnea
These factors can all affect the blood vessels and nerves that make erections possible. Poor circulation, nerve damage, and hormonal imbalances can each interfere with sexual function in their own way, which is why managing your overall health plays a bigger role in erectile function than you may realize
Mental Health
Your mind plays a large role in your sexual health. Whether you’re stressed, anxious, depressed, or dealing with performance pressure, these mental factors can directly interfere with arousal and erections. Sometimes a difficult experience can lead you to worry that it will happen again, and that worry can become part of the problem.
Mental health causes are real medical causes, and they deserve the same level of attention as physical ones.
Lifestyle Factors
Lifestyle does not explain every case of ED, but it can contribute more than you think. Heavy alcohol use, smoking, poor diet, lack of exercise, and chronic sleep loss all affect circulation, hormones, and energy. Over time, those effects can show up in sexual performance.
Consider this. If you work long hours, eat poorly, and feel stressed all the time, your body is already stretched thin. You may have less energy, lower libido, worse blood flow, and more anxiety. All these symptoms can pile up, and ED can develop from that combination.
ED and Telehealth
Erectile dysfunction is often well-suited for telehealth because the evaluation starts with what a provider can do remotely. Reviewing your symptoms and health history doesn’t require an office visit, and for many men, that’s where the conversation needs to begin anyway.
For a condition that feels personal, the privacy telehealth offers matters. There’s no waiting room, where you could run into someone you might recognize. You can have an honest conversation with a licensed provider from wherever you feel comfortable, which may make it easier for you to be open about what’s actually going on.
How Telehealth Providers Evaluate ED
A typical evaluation starts with a secure online intake form. You’ll answer questions about how often the problem occurs, when it started, and whether it came on gradually or suddenly. Your provider may also ask whether you experience erections in other situations, like during sleep, since that detail can help point toward a physical or psychological cause.
During your intake, your telehealth provider may also ask questions about:
- Current medications and supplements
- Past or ongoing medical conditions
- Blood pressure, diabetes, and heart health
- Smoking, alcohol, and substance use
- Mood, stress, and relationship concerns
This information helps the provider sort through likely causes. In some cases, the answers may strongly point to circulation, hormones, or medication side effects. In other cases, the pattern may suggest anxiety, stress, or a combination of issues are at the root. Whatever the cause, a licensed provider will review your responses and, if appropriate, move forward with a treatment plan.
Note that there may be times when you need additional assistance. If your symptoms suggest a more serious underlying issue, a provider may recommend lab work, blood pressure checks, or an in-person visit. That’s not a limitation of telehealth. It means the evaluation did its job and flagged something that needs a closer look.
Additional Questions to Expect During Your Visit
A good telehealth visit can be quite thorough. To help you prepare for your telehealth visit, here are additional questions your provider may ask:
- Do you still wake up with erections?
- Did the problem start suddenly or build over time?
- Are you under unusual stress right now?
- What medications or supplements do you take?
- Do you have a history of heart disease or high blood pressure?
Answer honestly here. The more complete your history is, the better your provider can evaluate what’s happening and what is an appropriate next step.
Why Evaluation Matters Before Treatment
It’s easy to think of ED as something that just needs a simple prescription. In some cases, treatment is straightforward. In others, however, ED can point to a deeper issue. Something else may be going on, like fluctuating blood sugar levels or low testosterone. A proper evaluation helps protect your health and improve the odds that the treatment plan actually fits the cause.
ED is common and almost always has an explanation. Sometimes that explanation is physical. Sometimes it is psychological. Often it is both. Telehealth is a useful way to start the conversation because it provides privacy, structure, and access to licensed providers who know which questions to ask.
Disclaimer: Compounded medications are not FDA-approved.