venerdì 27 febbraio 2009

My girlfriend has a high sexual appetite

I am a 41 year old man who, thus far, never had the opportunity to have sexual intercourse, and this now presents itself with a lady I am very fond of and am getting very serious about. Recently, we "tried" and I was not successful to climax during my love making performance. I identify a few issues which are involved. First, I am not circumcised and I have a tight-ish foreskin, for which I am using Betamethasone Valerate treatment, along with some stretching.
Second, and more important, I have obviously been used, all my life this far, to the one person version of self stimulation arousal for orgasms. However, I am somewhat concerned that this has "programmed" me, and that it is now dificult for me to find the attempted intercourse act sufficiently arousing to actually obtain performance abilities. In addition, there is the issue that whatever visual fantasies I preoccuiped myself within the one person self stimulation version...it is difficult to get past these, it would seem, in the actual act.
My apologies if this is too explicit. It is a genuine and serious problem, I assure you, which is causing me some considerable anxiety when making love. My girlfriend has a high sexual appetite, which means that she wants this "sorted" fairly quickly, which in turn obviously rebounds onto performance anxiety on me....and I am afraid that if I cant get it "sorted" or perform when making love within a reasonable time, that she is going to look elsewhere, if you take my meaning. I hope someone here can help me unravel this problem and offer some sound advice. Do you think Viagra would help?
Thank you very much in advance.

lunedì 23 febbraio 2009

Cialis better than Viagra...

In a switch over study 66% preferred Cialis to Viagra, which confirms Danny’s observation as to duration of erection.

A multicenter, randomized, double-blind, crossover study of patient preference for tadalafil 20 mg or sildenafil citrate 50 mg during initiation of treatment for erectile dysfunction.
Department of Urology, Virginia Mason Medical Center, Seattle, Washington 98111, USA.

BACKGROUND: Tadalafil is a phosphodiesterase 5 (PDE5) inhibitor approved in >30 countries for the treatment of erectile dysfunction (ED). It has been shown to improve erectile function compared with placebo in Phase III studies, but clinical experience comparing tadalafil with the PDE5 inhibitor sildenafil citrate is lacking.
OBJECTIVE: This study compared patient preference for tadalafil 20 mg or sildenafil 50 mg during initial treatment for ED. It also compared the tolerability of the 2 agents at these doses.
METHODS: This randomized, double-blind, fixed-dose, 2-period crossover trial took place at 13 sites in the United States and Germany. Patients were randomized 1:1 to receive 4 weeks of treatment with tadalafil 20 mg or sildenafil 50 mg, followed by the alternative treatment, to be taken as needed up to once daily before sexual activity.
RESULTS: The study enrolled 215 men with ED, 109 randomized to the tadalafil-sildenafil sequence and 106 to the sildenafil-tadalafil sequence. Their mean age was 49.8 years; 84.7% were sildenafil naive and 15.3% had undergone a previous inadequate trial of sildenafil. Most patients had moderate ED (60.5%) of >or=1 year's duration (74.9%). Of 190 evaluable patients, 126 (66.3%) preferred to initiate treatment with tadalafil, compared with 64 (33.7%) with sildenafil exposure. Both medications were well tolerated, with no significant differences in the incidence of treatment-emergent adverse events. Headache (11.2% tadalafil, 8.8% sildenafil), dyspepsia [indigestion](6.0% and 4.2%, respectively), nasopharyngitis [inflammation of the nose and pharynx](4.7% and 2.8%), and flushing (2.8% and 4.7%) were the most common adverse events.
CONCLUSIONS: Tadalafil 20 mg was preferred to sildenafil 50 mg for the initiation of ED therapy in this study population. Both medications were well tolerated.


venerdì 20 febbraio 2009

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mercoledì 18 febbraio 2009

About LEVITRA

LEVITRA is an FDA-approved oral prescription medication for the treatment of erectile dysfunction (ED) in men. It is available in 2.5-mg, 5-mg, 10-mg, and 20-mg tablets and is taken only when needed.
Take LEVITRA no more than once a day.
What LEVITRA does:
- LEVITRA helps increase blood flow to the penis, so it may help men with ED get and keep an erection that lasts long enough to have successful sex. Once a man has completed sexual activity, blood flow to his penis should decrease and his erection should go away
- LEVITRA has been clinically shown to improve erectile function, even in men who had other health factors, like high cholesterol, high blood pressure, or diabetes
- LEVITRA provided first-time success and reliable improvement of erection quality for many men, including those with high cholesterol, high blood pressure, or diabetes

Men taking LEVITRA reported having harder erections and greater success at maintaining their erections long enough to have successful sex
A lot of men who took LEVITRA were successful the first time they tried it. It's for the man who needs a little help once in a while and the man who needs more frequent help.

LEVITRA:
- Works for many men with a broad range of conditions, including high cholesterol Works for most men, including those taking one or more types of blood pressure medication (ask your doctor about drug interactions)

- Works for many men with type 1 or type 2 diabetes, across all levels of ED severity May work when other oral treatments do not LEVITRA is a proven, effective treatment that works for most men. And it has been taken with medications used to treat other common medical conditions (ask your doctor about drug interactions).

lunedì 16 febbraio 2009

Is Cialis For Impotence An Effective Treatment?


That feeling of frustration is all too familiar…literally millions of men have struggled with the effects of ED. It’s not something most men are comfortable discussing, but it should help to know that if you are experiencing erectile dysfunction, you are far from alone, nor are you beyond help.
Impotence is generally caused by a lack of circulation in the arteries and veins of the penis, preventing normal sexual function. While it can be uncomfortable and embarrassing, impotence is actually quite treatable. Everything from herbal applications to dietary changes to testosterone replacement can ease symptoms in most men. For those who need an extra bit of help, the Cialis drug for impotence is just one of many medications currently available.
Often, impotence is caused by an underlying physical problem, such as diabetes or heart disease, or it is the result of a physical injury. It can also be a side effect of some medications. If you suspect one of these causes in your own case, you should see your doctor and have a thorough physical. Curing your problem could be as easy as prescribing the right medication or changing your current one. If neither of these is the cause in your case, then you may want to consider an option such as Cialis for impotence treatment.

mercoledì 11 febbraio 2009

The Search for the Female Equivalent of Viagra

Even in the most sexually liberated and self-satisfied of nations, many people still yearn to burn more, to feel ready for bedding no matter what the clock says and to desire their partner of 23 years as much as they did when their love was brand new.
The market is saturated with books on how to revive a flagging libido or spice up monotonous sex, and sex therapists say “lack of desire” is one of the most common complaints they hear from patients, particularly women.
And though there may be legitimate sociological or personal underpinnings to that diminished desire — chronic overwork and stress, a hostile workplace, a slovenly or unsupportive spouse — still the age-old search continues for a simple chemical fix, Cupid encapsulated, a thrill in a pill.
Since the spectacular success of Viagra and similar drugs, the pharmaceutical industry has been searching for the female equivalent of Viagra — a treatment that would do for women’s most common sexual complaint, lack of desire, what sildenafil did for men’s, erectile dysfunction.
Initial trials of Viagra in women proved highly disappointing. True, the drug enhanced engorgement of vaginal tissue, just as it had of the penis, but that extra bit of pelvic swelling did nothing to amplify women’s desire for or enjoyment of sex.
What is needed for the treatment of so-called female hypoactive sexual desire disorder, researchers decided, is a reasonably safe and effective drug that acts on the central nervous system, on the pleasure centers of the brain or the sensory circuitry that serves them.
For a while, many sex therapists and doctors were optimistic about Procter & Gamble’s Intrinsa, a testosterone patch that delivers small transdermal pulses of the sex hormone thought to play a crucial if poorly understood role in male and female libido alike. But in 2005, the Food and Drug Administration refused to approve Intrinsa, declaring that its medical risks outweighed whatever modest and spotty benefits it might offer.
More recently, another potentially promising treatment for hypoactive desire has been making its way through clinical trials. The compound, called bremelanotide, is a synthetic version of a hormone involved in skin pigmentation, and it was initially developed by Palatin Technologies of New Jersey as a potential tanning agent to help prevent skin cancer. But when male college students participating in early safety tests began reporting that the drug sometimes gave them erections, the company began exploring bremelanotide’s utility as a treatment for sexual disorders.
Studies in rodents demonstrated that the drug not only gave male rats spontaneous erections, but also fomented sexual excitement in female rats, prompting them to wiggle their ears, hop excitedly, rub noses with males and otherwise display unmistakable hallmarks of rodent arousal.
Importantly, the females responded to the drug only under laboratory conditions where they could maintain a sense of control over the mating game. Take away the female’s opportunity to escape or proceed at her preferred pace, and no amount of bremelanotide would get those ears to wiggle. In other words, Annette M. Shadiack, director of biological research of Palatin, said, “this doesn’t look like a potential date-rape drug.”
Inspired by the rodent work, the company decided to give the drug a whirl on women. Results from a pilot study of 26 postmenopausal women with diagnoses of sexual arousal disorder suggest that bremelanotide may well have some mild aphrodisiacal properties.
Responding to questionnaires after taking either the drug or a dummy pill, 73 percent of the women on bremelanotide reported feeling genitally aroused, compared with 23 percent given the placebo; and 43 percent of the bremelanotide group said the treatment augmented their sexual desire, against only 19 percent of those on dummy pills.
Women in the treatment group also were slightly more likely to have sex with their partners during the course of the trial than were those in the control group, although who initiated the romps was not specified.
Larger trials of the drug at some 20 clinical centers around the United States are now under way. Among other things, the researchers will try adjusting the dosage to see if more bremelanotide may provoke a more robust response with a minimum of unpleasant or embarrassing side effects.
For example, researchers are as yet unsure whether sustained use of bremelanotide will end up doing what the drug was meant to do in the first place, and bestow on its beaming clients a truly healthy tan.
By NATALIE ANGIER
New York Times (Science)

martedì 10 febbraio 2009

Viagra Used Recreationally on British Club Scene

"The recreational use of Viagra by apparently healthy women and men is now occurring in Britain," Judith Aldridge and Fiona Measham, senior researchers at the University of Manchester, said in a letter posted on The British Medical Journal Internet site. Aldridge and Measham interviewed young adults at nightclubs in northern England within weeks of the launch of the drug in Britain in 1998. Customers and staff said the triangular blue pills made by the U.S. pharmaceutical company Pfizer were readily available for 16 pounds (US$24) for a 50 mg tablet. Most of the men and women who admitted taking Viagra used it simultaneously with other drugs and alcohol.
"Of particular concern is the combination use of Viagra with amyl nitrite ('poppers'), both of which dilate blood vessels, and can result in a dangerous drop in blood pressure potentially causing heart attack or stroke," the researchers said.
All of the people who admitted using Viagra reported positive effects: enhanced sexual desire and lovemaking, and feelings of warmth. They got the drug from friends, partners, dealers, sex shops, or via the Internet.
Ironically, the drug is not as freely available for many impotent men who need it. Fearful that demand could bankrupt the country's government-funded National Health Service (NHS), Health Secretary Frank Dobson issued proposals suggesting Viagra should only be prescribed in the NHS system for men whose impotence is caused by a physical condition.
The move infuriated doctors who said the policy was unacceptable and unethical. The British Medical Association advised doctors to defy the government and prescribe the drug to patients who would benefit from it.

venerdì 6 febbraio 2009

History of Viagra

Viagra was instigating in middle of April 1998 in the US, and was an instantaneous hit to treat powerlessness and dissimilar degrees of erectile dysfunction. Within 14 days in spite of the high Viagra cost, doctors were writing in excess of 110,000 Viagra scripts a week. In 14 weeks 2 million Viagra writings had been written in the US alone and Viagra had turn into established as a new frivolous drug in club culture world-wide, though non-medical provisions were unusual in many countries with smuggled Viagra tablets enticing over $100 each.
Soon subsequent to, the reports of Viagra side effects start on to climb. Alternate Viagra, free of charge Viagra, herbal Viagra, and economical Viagra, viagra sale online, natural Viagra, Viagra alternative - Viagra sales leapt and so did sales of every type of aphrodisiac on the weakness market, and all shows potential more for less.
As a consequence of all this, Pfizer's shares ascend from $45 to $115. Wild claims were being prepared that Viagra had the supremacy not only to cure weakness but also to give strong, non-impotent older men the sexual presentation of a twenty year old. Viagra created an for the night stampede to millions of medical doctor by a generation of completely normal and healthy men, looking for the supreme Viagra enhanced sex they'd had in years. Sex up to six times a night has been accounted later than normal men take Viagra.

giovedì 5 febbraio 2009

How exactly does Viagra work?

Viagra works by causing the smooth muscles in your blood vessels to relax, increasing blood flow around and lowering the blood pressure. The active ingredient in Viagra, sildenafil, is also a PDE5 inhibitor; and it is this in particular that specifies an increase in blood flow to the penis. When a man is sexually stimulated his penile arteries go through a process to relax and enlarge. As they enlarge, the veins that remove blood from the penis are compressed thus restricting blood flow out of the penis, causing an erection. Although erectile dysfunction was originally thought to be purely psychological, the discovery of Viagra refuted this and it is now common fact that the nerves and blood vessels play a key role. If the nerves and blood vessels that facilitate the process of an erection do not work then erectile dysfunction occurs.

mercoledì 4 febbraio 2009

Before taking Viagra


Do not take Viagra if you are also using a nitrate drug for chest pain or heart problems. This includes nitroglycerin (Nitrostat, Nitrolingual, Nitro-Dur, Nitro-Bid, and others), isosorbide dinitrate (Dilatrate-SR, Isordil, Sorbitrate), and isosorbide mononitrate (Imdur, ISMO, Monoket). Nitrates are also found in some recreational drugs such as amyl nitrate or nitrite ("poppers"). Taking Viagra with a nitrate medicine can cause a serious decrease in blood pressure, leading to fainting, stroke, or heart attack. Before taking Viagra, tell your doctor if you are allergic to any drugs, or if you have:
- heart disease or heart rhythm problems;
- a recent history (in the past 6 months) of a heart attack, stroke, or heart rhythm disorder;
- congestive heart failure;
- high or low blood pressure;
- coronary artery disease;
- liver disease;
- kidney disease;
- a blood cell disorder such as sickle cell anemia, multiple myeloma, or leukemia;
- a bleeding disorder such as hemophilia;
- a stomach ulcer;
- retinitis pigmentosa (an inherited condition of the eye);
- a physical deformity of the penis (such as Peyronie's disease); or
if you have been told you should not have sexual intercourse for health reasons.
If you have any of these conditions, you may need a dose adjustment or special tests to safely take Viagra.
Viagra can decrease blood flow to the optic nerve of the eye, causing sudden vision loss. This has occurred in a small number of people taking Viagra, most of whom also had heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, or certain pre-existing eye problems, and in those who smoke or are over 50 years old. It is not clear whether Viagra is the actual cause of vision loss. Stop using Viagra and get emergency medical help if you have sudden vision loss. FDA pregnancy category B: This medication is not expected to be harmful to an unborn baby. Do not use Viagra without telling your doctor if you are pregnant or plan to become pregnant during treatment. It is not known if Viagra passes into breast milk or if it could harm a nursing baby. Do not use this medication without telling your doctor if you are breast-feeding a baby.

martedì 3 febbraio 2009

What's Viagra?


Sildenafil citrate, sold as Viagra, Revatio and under various other trade names, is a drug used to treat erectile dysfunction and pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). It was developed and is being marketed by the pharmaceutical company Pfizer. It acts by inhibiting cGMP specific phosphodiesterase type 5, an enzyme that regulates blood flow in the penis. Since becoming available in 1998, sildenafil has been the prime treatment for erectile dysfunction; its primary competitors on the market are tadalafil (Cialis) and vardenafil (Levitra).

lunedì 2 febbraio 2009

Around Viagra


Welcome to my blog About viagra.

In this web page we'll talk about viagra and all discussions that could born from here.