%0 Journal Article %T Case: Primary erectile dysfunction due to congenital isolated cavernous bodies %A Gerald Brock %A Katherine I. Henriquez %J Archive of "Canadian Urological Association Journal". %D 2017 %R 10.5489/cuaj.4521 %X The finding of a complete penile corporal septum is a rare malformation in which the corpora cavernosa are completely isolated and function independently. Keogh was the first to reference this in 1989.1 Kolbenstvedt reported what was thought to be a source of error in pressure recordings or in intracavernous injection.2 Gorga, in 1991, described isolated cavernous bodies in a patient with erectile dysfunction (ED).3 This abnormality may be associated with corporal veno-occlusive dysfunction and hypoplastic cavernous arteries. It can be recognized incidentally during penile duplex ultrasound (DUS), when a vasoactive agent is injected into one corpus cavernosum, producing tumescence in one side while the contralateral corporal body remains flaccid, requiring a contralateral injection to obtain a complete erection %U https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5798445/