Erectile dysfunction: causes, and why it's worth getting checked

ED affects millions of UK men and is highly treatable — but it can also be an early warning sign. A GP-reviewed guide to causes and treatment.

Quick answer: Erectile dysfunction usually reflects a mix of blood-flow, nerve, hormone and psychological factors — not simply "getting older". It is very treatable, but new persistent ED can also warn of cardiovascular or metabolic problems, so assessment beats silent embarrassment.

Erectile dysfunction affects an estimated 4.3 million men in the UK — around half of men over 40 experience it to some degree. Two things about it are under-appreciated: it’s very treatable, and it’s sometimes the first visible sign of something else worth knowing about.

Why does erectile dysfunction happen?

An erection is fundamentally a blood-flow event, coordinated by nerves and hormones and heavily influenced by your state of mind. Anything that affects those systems can cause ED:

Circulation and metabolism

High blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes and smoking all narrow or stiffen blood vessels. Because the arteries involved are small, ED can show up years before heart problems do — which is why new, persistent ED in a younger man deserves a proper check, not just a pill.

Psychology and relationships

Stress, anxiety (including performance anxiety), depression and relationship strain are major drivers, especially in younger men. The mind and body loop into each other — one bad experience creates anxiety that causes the next.

Medicines and lifestyle

Some antidepressants, blood-pressure treatments and hair-loss medicines can contribute, as can alcohol, recreational drugs and long-distance cycling. Never stop a prescribed medicine without speaking to a clinician.

Hormones

Low testosterone is a less common primary cause but worth checking when other symptoms fit (low mood, fatigue, reduced libido).

How is ED treated in the UK?

Tablet treatments that improve blood flow are highly effective for most men and have been used safely for decades. They’re prescription-only in the UK (one format is available from pharmacies after consultation), and assessment matters: these tablets interact dangerously with some heart medicines.

Beyond tablets, addressing the underlying cause — fitness, weight, smoking, alcohol, stress, sleep — often improves things substantially. For psychological ED, talking therapies work well.

Read our full guide to ED tablet types and safe online supply.

When should you see a doctor about ED?

Seek prompt assessment if ED is:

  • Sudden and complete
  • Associated with pelvic trauma or surgery
  • Accompanied by chest pain, breathlessness on exertion, or neurological symptoms
  • Linked to painful erections or penile deformity

Otherwise, a confidential online assessment is a reasonable first step at a regulated UK clinic.

The takeaway

ED is common, fixable, and occasionally informative. A confidential online assessment takes minutes, and a registered clinician can both treat the symptom and make sure nothing more important is hiding behind it.

Check ED treatment options or start an assessment.

Frequently asked questions

What is the main cause of erectile dysfunction?

There is rarely one cause. Blood-flow problems (linked to blood pressure, cholesterol, diabetes and smoking), psychological factors (stress, anxiety, depression), medicines, hormones and lifestyle all contribute — often in combination.

Can erectile dysfunction be a sign of heart disease?

Yes. Because penile arteries are small, ED can appear years before other cardiovascular symptoms. New or worsening ED in a man under 50, or ED with chest pain on exertion, deserves proper assessment — not just a tablet.

At what age does ED become common?

ED becomes more common with age — around half of men over 40 report some degree — but it is not 'normal' at any age if it bothers you. Younger men often have a stronger psychological or lifestyle component, but physical causes still need excluding.

Is ED treatable?

Highly treatable in most men. Tablet treatments, lifestyle change, addressing underlying conditions, and talking therapies all help depending on cause. A confidential assessment takes minutes online at regulated UK clinics.

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Our registered clinicians can assess what's right for you — and will tell you honestly if treatment isn't.

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