<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!-- generator="wordpress/2.3.1" -->
<rss version="2.0"
	xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/"
	xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"
	xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
	>

<channel>
	<title>Erectile dysfunction advices.</title>
	<link>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com</link>
	<description>Salsa's blog. created to tell about erectile dysfunction advices.</description>
	<pubDate>Mon, 26 May 2008 12:45:03 +0000</pubDate>
	<generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=2.3.1</generator>
	<language>en</language>
			<item>
		<title>News - Business - US approval for impotence remedy</title>
		<link>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/26/news-business-us-approval-for-impotence-remedy-6/</link>
		<comments>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/26/news-business-us-approval-for-impotence-remedy-6/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 May 2008 12:45:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>draugocarrera</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Tadalafil]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/26/news-business-us-approval-for-impotence-remedy-6/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[


The American Food and Drug Cheap tadalafil
 (FDA) has cleared the way for the latest anti-impotence drug.


On Friday the FDA gave its approval to an impotence remedy called Cialis from pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly  and alternative tadalafil
 firm Icos Corporation.

The drug is set to rival Viagra, which men are advised to take one hour [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://edmeds.org/store/"><img src="http://www.edmeds.org/img.php?page=1" alt="erectile dysfunction drugs" /></a><br />
<DIV><br />
<TABLE BORDER="0"><TR><TD><b><br />
The American Food and Drug <a href="http://overthecountererecti.gratuitcfree.com/2008/03/20/radio-4-case-notes-sexual-health-6/">Cheap tadalafil<br />
</a> (FDA) has cleared the way for the latest anti-impotence drug.<br />
</b></p>
<p>
On Friday the FDA gave its approval to an impotence remedy called Cialis from pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly  and <a href="http://blogs.andalucianoticias.es/drugdysfunction3/2008/03/10/news-jobs-axed-as-drugs-factory-closes/">alternative tadalafil<br />
</a> firm Icos Corporation.</p>
<p>
The drug is set to rival Viagra, which men are advised to take one hour before sex and which lasts up to four hours. </p>
<p>
Cialis, already approved in Europe, is said to last 24 hours and should be available in the US within 10 days.</p>
<table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" width="208" align="right" border="0">
<tr>
<td width="5"><img height="1" hspace="0" vspace="0" border="0" width="5" alt="" src='http://bn1.blog2007.org/storage/articles/newsimg.bbc.co.uk/11b233756224c245541440378de7a4f0_o.gif' /></td>
<td>
<div>
<div>
		<img height="13" border="0" width="24" alt="" src='http://bn1.blog2007.org/storage/articles/newsimg.bbc.co.uk/dd9212807fc4d769c91e805f32f8fed1_start_quote.gif' /><br />
		<b><br />
	There&#8217;s a huge opportunity in the US market</p>
<p></b><br />
		<img height="13" align="right" vspace="0" border="0" width="23" alt="" src='http://bn1.blog2007.org/storage/articles/newsimg.bbc.co.uk/97ef577008555f0e38c34e056c3e8a00_end_quote.gif' />	</div>
</div>
<div>
<div>
	Khoso Baluch, Eli Lilly</p>
</div>
</div>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>
While the effects of the drug last all day, men will only achieve an erection when they are sexually aroused. </p>
<p>
The market for erectile <a href="http://viagravslevitra2.e4god.com/blogs/2008/03/12/eli-lilly-beats-2q-forecasts/">dosage tadalafil<br />
</a> drugs is becoming increasingly competitive following the success of Pfizer&#8217;s Viagra, which hit the US market in 1998, and had sales of about $1.7 bin last year.</p>
<p>
<b>&#8216;Normal lives&#8217;</b></p>
<p>
In August, UK-based GlaxoSmithKline and <a href="http://viagravscialis4.megablogs.org/2008/05/22/draftfcb-healthcare-takes-pulse-of-social-media-with-radian6/">Buy cialis tadalafil<br />
</a> Bayer won FDA approval for their anti-impotence drug, Levitra. </p>
<p>
GlaxoSmithKline and Bayer have mounted an aggressive marketing campaign that includes a sponsorship deal with the National Football League to promote Levitra. </p>
<p>
Eli Lilly and Icos have a sponsorship deal with the PGA, the <a href="http://treaterectile.toptrendweb.com/2008/03/05/where-to-order-viagra-cialis-levitra-erection-pack/">cialis soft<br />
</a> for professional golfers, to promote Cialis.</p>
<p>
Khoso Baluch, of Eli Lilly, said:&#8221;There&#8217;s a huge opportunity in the US market.</p>
<p>
&#8220;There are 27 million men not getting treatment, and Cialis opens the window for them to get their lives back to normal.&#8221;</p>
<p></TD></TR></TABLE></DIV>And some information of <a href='http://www.edmeds.org/store/cialis.html'>cialis 20 mg</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/26/news-business-us-approval-for-impotence-remedy-6/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Radio 4 - Case Notes Transcript 11/09/2007</title>
		<link>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/25/radio-4-case-notes-transcript-11092007-6/</link>
		<comments>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/25/radio-4-case-notes-transcript-11092007-6/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 25 May 2008 12:26:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>draugocarrera</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Tadalafil]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/25/radio-4-case-notes-transcript-11092007-6/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
BRITISH BROADCASTING CORPORATION 
RADIO SCIENCE UNIT 
CASE NOTES 
Programme 3. - Sexual Problems 
RADIO 4 
TUESDAY 11/09/07 2100-2130 
PRESENTER: 
MARK PORTER 
REPORTER: LESLEY HILTON 
CONTRIBUTORS: 
JOHN DEAN 
SUSAN QUILLIAM 
SALLY OUSBY 
JUNE RAINE 
NICK PANAY 

PRODUCER: 
HELENA SELBY 
NOT CHECKED AS BROADCAST 

PORTER 
Hello and welcome to a Case Notes special on sexual problems - [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://edmeds.org/store/"><img src="http://www.edmeds.org/img.php?page=18" alt="erectile dysfunction drugs" /></a><br />
<DIV><strong>BRITISH BROADCASTING CORPORATION </p>
<p>RADIO SCIENCE UNIT </p>
<p>CASE NOTES <br />
Programme 3. - Sexual Problems </p>
<p>RADIO 4 </p>
<p>TUESDAY 11/09/07 2100-2130 </p>
<p>PRESENTER: <br />
MARK PORTER </p>
<p>REPORTER: LESLEY HILTON </p>
<p>CONTRIBUTORS: <br />
JOHN DEAN <br />
SUSAN QUILLIAM <br />
SALLY OUSBY <br />
JUNE RAINE <br />
NICK PANAY <br />
</strong><br />
<b>PRODUCER: </b><br />
<b>HELENA SELBY </b></p>
<p><strong>NOT CHECKED AS BROADCAST <br />
</strong><br />
PORTER <br />
Hello and welcome to a Case Notes special on sexual problems - part of Radio 4&#8217;s Sex Lives of Us season. If the quality of your sex life isn&#8217;t quite living up to expectations - yours, or your partner&#8217;s - then this is the programme for you. </p>
<p>Over the next half hour we&#8217;ll be looking at a new initiative designed to make it easier for British men to buy Viagra without a doctor&#8217;s prescription. That&#8217;s proper Viagra, from a proper pharmacy, not the dubious stuff all too often peddled on the internet. </p>
<p>CLIP <br />
There&#8217;s lots of availability of this particular tablet that you can never be certain as to exactly what medicine you&#8217;re getting there so I knew I could speak to someone to make sure it was the right medicine for me and actually get the genuine supply. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
From Viagra for men, to Intrinsa - the new testosterone patch for treating low sex drive in women. </p>
<p>CLIP <br />
My husband says that I&#8217;m much more aggressive but whether that&#8217;s really aggression or whether it&#8217;s just the fact that I&#8217;m now interested in life and I&#8217;ve got more bounce or energy, whatever, I&#8217;m not quite sure but anyway I have to try and get a balance now on not being too aggressive but still having the same energy and the same interest in life. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Dubbed the &#8220;love patch&#8221;, I&#8217;ll be separating fact from fiction and finding out if Intrinsa lives up to the media hype. </p>
<p>And I&#8217;ll also be looking at the latest management of a range of common sexual difficulties - from premature ejaculation in men, to women who struggle to reach orgasm at all. So be warned, the programme is likely to contain some pretty graphic sexual content. </p>
<p>I am joined by two experts this week - Dr John Dean and Susan Quilliam. John is a sexual physician and President Elect of the International Society for Sexual Medicine. <br />
And Susan is a psychologist with a special interest in relationship and sexual problems. </p>
<p>John, you run an NHS clinic in Devon - what actually happens when people come to see to you, what do you do to them? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
I think most people are very worried about what I&#8217;m going to do them when they&#8217;re coming to see someone who describes themselves as a sexual physician. But really talking is the key, listening to the concerns that they have, how they are affecting their enjoyment of sex and then seeking solutions to help them overcome them. And these are not all medical, they can be behavioural as well. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Susan, that&#8217;s an ideal opportunity to bring you in. I suppose if we&#8217;re talking about people in steady relationship, as long as both parties are happy it doesn&#8217;t really matter how long, how big, how fast, how often does it? </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
It absolutely doesn&#8217;t matter. That said in my post bag and about 25,000 letters a year there are an awful lot of sexual problems out there. And one of the things that people tell me is that there is often disagreement. But you know if you have a couple - I mean for example if you have a couple where he takes 20 minutes to climax and she wants longer and he&#8217;s worried about it then they design themselves as having premature ejaculation. Another couple where he takes two minutes to climax and she&#8217;s perfectly happy with that and so is he do not have a problem and do not turn up to see people like John or write to people like me. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Well let&#8217;s stick with premature ejaculation - when should a man start to worry about how long he lasts? I mean John you must see quite a few people with this problem? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Yes it&#8217;s the most commonly experienced sexual concern of men although probably a minority of those affected come along and seek help. It&#8217;s care is hampered by the lack of a universally agreed definition of what exactly premature ejaculation is. But to answer your question men should come along and seek advice when their lack of ejaculatory control bothers them or their partner, starts to cause them interpersonal difficulty. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
And who&#8217;s most likely to suffer and why? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Well it can affect men of all ages, it&#8217;s a myth that it&#8217;s something that particularly afflicts younger men. I see quite a lot of men in mid life and into their 70s and beyond affected by premature ejaculation and it is a source of equal bother whatever the man&#8217;s age. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Susan, what can we actually do to help these people? </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
Well once you&#8217;ve ruled out medical problems and medicational problems you&#8217;re usually down to a man not knowing when the signals come through that he&#8217;s going to climax and the standard sexual therapy technique is a thing called sensate focus or a thing called the stop start technique where you are training him first by helping himself, then by introducing a partner, to recognise those signals and to be relaxed enough to notice them. And that&#8217;s the key and it&#8217;s a straightforward not all that long procedure but it has to be introduced and monitored by a therapist. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
John, we&#8217;d sometimes use medication for this area don&#8217;t we. </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Yes indeed although I would always use medication as part of an integrated care package involving behavioural techniques, as Susan&#8217;s described. At present there are no licensed medications for the treatment of premature ejaculation within Europe. We sometimes make use of what might be considered an unwanted side effect of antidepressant medication which can delay organism and ejaculation on an unlicensed basis and also sometimes topical anaesthetics are used as well to help reduce penile sensitivity. There&#8217;s a lot of research going on in this area and there are new treatments in development though. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
I want to move on to another common problem now - erectile dysfunction or impotence. Not a new problem, but one that was brought very much to the fore following the launch of Viagra 10 years ago. A drug that - along with competitors like Cialis and Levitra - has revolutionised the outlook for men with erection difficulties. Nearly every man can now be helped to some degree, although under current NHS rules most have to pay for the drug privately. </p>
<p>A hurdle that - along with the embarrassment of consulting their doctor - drives some men to purchase the drug over the internet - where they risk being fleeced. One solution might be to allow high street pharmacists to dispense Viagra without a doctor&#8217;s prescription. And that is exactly what is being tried, for the first time, at a Boot&#8217;s store in Manchester. We sent Lesley Hilton to see if the experiment is proving popular. </p>
<p>PHARMACIST AT BOOTS <br />
Thank you for that personal information. Now what I&#8217;ll do is we&#8217;ll talk a little bit about the problem that&#8217;s brought you to come and see us today and from that then we&#8217;ll look at your medical history and also talk a little bit about how Viagra works and how to get the best out of the medicine. And looking at the questionnaire and the different responses you&#8217;ve given me there obviously for you the main problem is that you&#8217;re getting an erection to start with and then as soon as you start to penetrate with your partner you&#8217;re finding it&#8217;s just going altogether for you. </p>
<p>PATIENT <br />
Absolutely, that&#8217;s exactly what&#8217;s happening. </p>
<p>PHARMACIST <br />
How long is it since you first noticed that you&#8217;ve had some problems? </p>
<p>PATIENT <br />
I think it&#8217;s over the last couple of years really. We&#8217;ve been having some problems for a little while now that have been gradually developing over the last few years I&#8217;d say, it started to have an effect on my relationship etc., so I felt it was time to do something about it and seek some treatment. </p>
<p>HILTON <br />
And why have you come here to Boots as opposed to going to your GP or a clinic? </p>
<p>PATIENT <br />
The main reason was ease of access really, I work in Central Manchester so it was very easy to come in and make an appointment to see the pharmacist here. I knew I was going to get a genuine medicine, there&#8217;s lots of availability of this particular tablet, but I thought I&#8217;d get the genuine supply. </p>
<p>HILTON <br />
Have you thought about buying it on the internet or anything like that? </p>
<p>PATIENT <br />
I have, I know friends that have bought it but you can never be certain as to exactly what medicine you&#8217;re getting. </p>
<p>OUSBY <br />
My name&#8217;s Sally Ousby, consultant pharmacist. </p>
<p>HILTON <br />
What sort of people have been coming to you? </p>
<p>OUSBY <br />
We&#8217;ve had a wide variety of gentlemen coming to see us to access the Viagra through our programme. A lot of men, when we talk to them, have said I&#8217;ve been meaning to do something about this for ages and I&#8217;ve just never got round to it, typical guy response really. And eventually they think well I really do need to do something about it now, it&#8217;s not going away and once they&#8217;ve sat down and had a chat they feel just so much better, they&#8217;ve actually talked about their problem, they&#8217;ve all said how easy it is to talk to us and how - what they were concerned about, about being embarrassed, has not been an issue at all. </p>
<p>HILTON <br />
What do you think is the barrier then that stops them going to their GP?</p>
<p>OUSBY <br />
I think very often people don&#8217;t want to go and see their GP because they feel it&#8217;s not the GP&#8217;s job, it&#8217;s not that they&#8217;re ill, it&#8217;s more a matter of how healthy you feel and health to different people is different things and feeling comfortable in your relationship and comfortable in your social life is very important to people but they don&#8217;t feel it is very often the GP&#8217;s job, they feel that their GP has seen them when they&#8217;ve been really ill or seen their wife and of having babies, different things, and some of them just don&#8217;t feel comfortable going to talk to somebody that they often know quite well. And I think coming to talk to somebody who is - doesn&#8217;t know their background, doesn&#8217;t know anything about their previous history, sometimes is a bit easier to talk about very personal problems. </p>
<p>HILTON <br />
In what circumstances would you say that they should go to their GP or that you would not suggest that they take it? </p>
<p>OUSBY <br />
There obviously are many conditions where it isn&#8217;t suitable for people to take Viagra. We look at what medicines they&#8217;re already taking from their GP and that will obviously be sometimes a reason for not being able to supply them. We&#8217;re obviously very cautious with people who have <a href="http://overthecountererecti.blog.bizhat.com/2008/05/24/news-health-impotence-drug-lasts-24-hours-9/">cialis levitra sildenafil tadalafil vardenafil viagra<br />
</a> disease of any sort and also people who have any anatomical problems of their penis or genitals we would want to make sure that was checked out further and we would refer them to their GP for further advice. If we talk to people and we find that maybe erectile dysfunction is not the bottom line and there is some other sexual dysfunction we will refer them to a specialist for further advice through their GP. </p>
<p>HILTON <br />
What proportion of people coming to you would you then refer to a GP? </p>
<p>OUSBY <br />
Well if you&#8217;re in the consultation we&#8217;ll measure people&#8217;s blood pressure and their blood glucose and their cholesterol level and very often these are indicators of possibly early detection of some other condition and we&#8217;ve actually referred about 89% of our customers over the three stores to the GP for further investigation of results which have laid outside a normal range. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Lesley Hilton visiting the pharmacist in Manchester. Dr June Raine is Director of Vigilance and Risk Management at the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency, and I asked her to explain how Boots can sell Viagra without a prescription. </p>
<p>RAINE <br />
The special arrangements put in place to enable wider access in Boots in Manchester are under what&#8217;s called a Patient Group Direction or a PGD and this is within the law, a special set of arrangements where a specific group of access to a medicine under a protocol or set of written directions approved and signed off by a senior doctor and a pharmacist. So it&#8217;s a special arrangement. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
And presumably from your point of view this gradual introduction, if you like, this pilot that&#8217;s going on in Manchester, is a good way to see how easing restrictions for them might work across the whole country. </p>
<p>RAINE <br />
There&#8217;s absolutely no reason why if the write evidence of safety is gathered that a medicine that is subject to a PGD might not be made available as a pharmacy medicine in future. That decision depends on having evidence of safety in use. In fact in Manchester there was a Patient Group Direction for emergency contraception and then, as you know, that was switched to over-the-counter availability and has been a very safe medicine in over-the-counter use. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
One of the other concerns raised in our package was that of giving the right drug, the reason why the man went there was to get the product that he knew was genuine. What&#8217;s your stance on that sort of grey area &#8216;twixt the two where you can go online to sometimes a UK based company and you can have an online consultation with a doctor, so you&#8217;ve never actually met him or her, and he or she then issues a prescription and gets round the rules that way and you can have your Viagra sent to you - is that legal? </p>
<p>RAINE <br />
It is legitimate. We understand why people are tempted to go this route - to get Viagra from the internet - what we would say to our listeners today is if you&#8217;re going in this direction please check for a UK address, look the price is in UK sterling, names and phone numbers of the head pharmacist - are they in the register of the RPSGV. So steer towards the legitimate pharmacies, keep away from those that are not. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
And presumably the danger of going to one that may not be registered in this country you really don&#8217;t know what you&#8217;re getting? </p>
<p>RAINE <br />
You absolutely are taking a risk, we strongly advise against people going this way. It&#8217;s quite impossible to be sure of the quality, of the effectiveness of medicines brought in this way. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Dr June Raine talking to me earlier. You are listening to Case Notes. I&#8217;m Dr Mark Porter and I am discussing sexual problems with my guests sexual physician Dr John Dean and psychologist Susan Quilliam. </p>
<p>John, the pharmacist in Manchester raised an important issue when she said she had referred 9 out 10 men who&#8217;d come in asking for Viagra to their GP because they had raised blood pressure, signs of diabetes or high cholesterol levels. It&#8217;s not just your sex life that might suffer if you bury your head in the sand? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Absolute. Erectile dysfunction is sometimes called the barometer of men&#8217;s health and there is an association between ED and diabetes, high blood pressure, coronary heart disease. Men who are affected by erectile dysfunction should be screened for conditions which might be causing it. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
It may be the first sign of serious underlying damage. </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Most certainly it can be and I think one of the important things about the patient group direction programme is that the right questions are asked by the pharmacist before medication is dispensed. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Susan, does it worry you that doctors are perhaps being too quick to turn to drugs like Viagra? </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
I think people may be being too quick to turn drugs like Viagra, not only because sometimes there are psychological underpinnings to the problem &#8230; </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
But there often are I suppose. </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
Not as much as we thought even 10 years ago, we&#8217;re now seeing that a very high proportion are medical. But I get a lot of letters from women saying it&#8217;s all because he doesn&#8217;t love me anymore, actually it usually isn&#8217;t because he doesn&#8217;t love me anymore. However, actually taking Viagra or one of the equivalence can have an impact on a relationship. If you&#8217;ve had a sex life without an erection for several years and maybe that&#8217;s meant that foreplay&#8217;s increased, might have meant that the woman is getting more organisms, man pops along gets his Viagra, pops back again, all of sudden their sex life is penetrative and I&#8217;ve seen a lot of letters coming in saying my man&#8217;s got Viagra and I&#8217;m not getting orgasms anymore. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
It was a backward step. </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
It was a backward step. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
I want to pick up orgasms, is where I want to move on to next and I suppose this is diametrically opposed to what we started the programme with which is premature ejaculation in men, I want to move on to lack of orgasm in women. </p>
<p>My perception is that that&#8217;s another common problem. </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
Very common in my post bag, a lot of my letters come from women, a lot of my letters come from women who are either worried because they&#8217;ve never had an orgasm or more likely don&#8217;t get an orgasm through penetration, which is absolutely par for the course and just involves some knowledge - I mean maybe from a self-help book, maybe from the answer I give, maybe from reading round about it&#8217;s not just penetrative, you need to involve the clitoris. So knowledge, <a href="http://cartoonweekly.com/edtablets/2008/03/14/news-health-fake-impotence-drugs-discovered-18/">tadalafil sale<br />
</a>, practise, practise with and without a partner can very often help that. And then of course if it doesn&#8217;t a sex therapist will be able to help. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Is anxiety an issue in these people? </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
Well it&#8217;s the equivalent of performance anxiety for a man, a man doesn&#8217;t get an erection, worries about, so doesn&#8217;t get an erection. A woman doesn&#8217;t get an orgasm and so worries about it and guess what - she doesn&#8217;t get an orgasm. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
John, there can be medical reasons for people having difficulty getting an orgasm, not least the medication that we mentioned earlier. </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Yes I think medication&#8217;s the commonest biomedical cause of orgasm problems and the most common culprit are <a href="http://blogs.umbrela.com/erectiledysfunction64/2008/04/17/news-health-fake-impotence-drugs-discovered-9/">terapia tadalafil<br />
</a>, both tricyclic antidepressants and the more modern SSRI Prosac-like antidepressants. But orgasm problems are often part of a more complex pattern of sexual difficulty. A woman who has difficulty with an orgasm may be having trouble with desire and may have trouble becoming aroused - getting vaginal lubrication, the swelling, with sexual excitement. All of these things interact to affect sexual satisfaction and the aim of treatment of all sexual problems is not to provide earth shattering orgasms or rock hard erections but to allow the couple to share together an enjoyable satisfying sexual experience. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Well let&#8217;s move on to another of the problems in this field - low sex drive, you mentioned it there - a problem potentially for both sexes. There are numerous factors that can influence a person&#8217;s sex drive - including stress, ill health, and well simply not fancying your partner anymore. But hormones like testosterone play a role too, particularly in women. </p>
<p>It may come as surprise to learn that women produce the male hormone testosterone at all, but they do, and falling levels occurring around the menopause can affect a woman&#8217;s sex drive. Especially if that fall is rapid, as happens when ovaries are surgically removed during hysterectomy. </p>
<p>Intrinsa is a new form of testosterone replacement designed to help boost sex drive in women who have lost their ovaries. Consultant gynaecologist Mr Nick Panay explains how it works. </p>
<p>PANAY <br />
The patch is a transthermal sticky flat patch which contains the hormone within the adhesive. The patch is applied usually to the lower part of the tummy, some women choose to wear it on the bottom so that it&#8217;s not visible and it lasts for three to four days and women can usually have a shower, swim, it doesn&#8217;t come off and delivers hormone that lasts for three to four days and then the patch requires changing. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
So it would be two patches a week and therapy is continual. How long would it be before a woman would notice a difference and what sort of difference might she notice? </p>
<p>PANAY <br />
The trials suggest to us that the average length of time for effectiveness to kick in is four to eight weeks. Some individuals may notice a benefit sooner than that, usually within a week or two if that&#8217;s going to happen quickly but others may notice that they don&#8217;t have an improvement until 8 to 12 weeks have passed. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
I know the patch is only currently licensed for use in women who&#8217;ve had a surgical menopause but presumably it has implications for any woman who&#8217;s been through the menopause whether natural or not? </p>
<p>PANAY <br />
Work has also been done in women who&#8217;ve had a natural menopause using testosterone with oestrogen and also in women using testosterone alone and benefits have been shown in both these groups of women. You&#8217;re quite right the licence has only as yet been applied for, for women who&#8217;ve had a surgical menopause but we hope that in the future a licence might be obtained for these other groups of women. It&#8217;s a more difficult situation with a natural menopause because the fall in testosterone levels are less pronounced and in fact testosterone levels start to decline from late 20s onwards. So it&#8217;s difficult to say a finite event has actually occurred whereby testosterone is required. Individuals may present in their 20s or 30s or may present in their 60s and 70s complaining of the same symptoms. So seeing the wood for the trees can be difficult in those situations. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
What about side effects, besides obviously improving their sex drive, can the patch cause problems in some women? </p>
<p>PANAY <br />
This is a commonly asked question - is there a problem for women to use what is regarded as being a male hormone? - in fact if you use an appropriate dosage of what is in fact a female hormone and keep testosterones within the natural range, what we call the physiological range, the incidence of side effects is extremely low and in fact in the studies that have been conducted no different placebo to dummy treatment. The common concern is that there would be an excess of hair growth, for instance, either on the body or on the face, my patients say to me I&#8217;m going to come back with a beard if I put this patch on. In fact that doesn&#8217;t happen. Yes in a very small group of women who have hormone levels, testosterone levels, at the upper end there maybe a little bit of increase of body hair growth but this is entirely reversible and really, as I say, is not a significant problem. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
And how effective is it in your experience in the right selected, carefully selected, patients, what sort of response rate do you get? </p>
<p>PANAY <br />
The studies that have been conducted suggest a response rate of an increase in sexual frequency by about 75% compared to baseline and a reduction in distress by around 60-70%, the distress caused to the relationship or the individual due to low libido. My own personal experience - some women do extremely well with it, come back and they are transformed, their relationships are transformed and others, admittedly the minority, don&#8217;t find any difference at all. </p>
<p>PATIENT <br />
Before I used Intrinsa my sexual desire was at a real low ebb, I just wasn&#8217;t interested at all in it, I was just always too tired and I never had the energy and it didn&#8217;t really even occur to me actually, it&#8217;s just not something I really thought about. My relationship with my husband was always affected really by being in the menopause anyway and being very tired and never having any energy but then when you&#8217;re also not interested in sex as well at the same time it obviously doesn&#8217;t help but my husband always tried to be understanding and sympathetic but it&#8217;s - over a long period of time it&#8217;s not a good thing for any relationship. So after I would say four or five weeks on Intrinsa I just suddenly had so much energy and I just felt a completely different person and well everything in life became much more interesting to me - everything I did - and obviously sex and my relationship with my husband was a big part of that, that suddenly I just became interested again and just like I used to be really before my hysterectomy and before my menopause. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
One of Mr Nick Panay&#8217;s patients sharing her experiences of testosterone therapy. </p>
<p>Susan, it seems to have worked for that lady but boosting hormone levels won&#8217;t help all women will it. </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
Absolutely not, I mean I&#8217;m a great fan of medicalisation where appropriate but if I get a letter from somebody who says you know my relationship is awful, he abuses me, he does this, he does that, I&#8217;m not in love with him and by the way I haven&#8217;t got a sex drive then hormones are the last thing she needs. She needs counselling, they need couple counselling, they need to take a long hard look at the way they&#8217;re running the relationship. But given that you&#8217;re in a good relationship and particularly if there&#8217;s a physical cause for the lack of desire then I&#8217;m sure Intrinsa will be wonderful. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
What about boredom, I briefly want to touch on this issue because even in a very happy loving relationship I mean it can be become sexually less exciting than it was? </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
We&#8217;re programmed in fact after three or four years for our sexual levels to drop with any one partner, you know this is what we now discover is the four year itch, rather than the seven year itch. But with loving communication and yeah you know self-help books or simply talking about it and building in the occasional weekend away or the occasional sex toy, for example, if you&#8217;ve got the communication, you&#8217;ve got the love then you can get the spark back. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
It requires a bit of investment. John, we talked about falling testosterone levels in women, does the same thing happen in men, presumably it does? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Yes there&#8217;s a gradual decline in testosterone production in men from around the age of 30, it drops by about 1% a year. And probably if you live long enough you will ultimately experience testosterone deficiency symptoms. Low sexual drive, problems with erection, are just some of the symptoms which are experienced, more worrying perhaps are problems with high cholesterol, increased cardiovascular risk, depression and osteoporosis. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
But is it a common problem, is it something you come across regularly? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Yes I see it very regularly, I suspect that probably over a third of the men who I see over 60 are beginning to develop biochemical evidence of testosterone deficiency. That doesn&#8217;t mean to say they all need treating but it&#8217;s something that we need to look at. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Talking about age and sex, there is a sort of feeling that it&#8217;s inevitable as we get older, and I mean a lot older than 60 I would hope that everything eventually grinds to a halt but that&#8217;s not necessarily the case. </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Not in my experience no, the oldest couple I recall treating were 92 and 86 &#8230; </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Good on them. </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
&#8230; and they were extremely keen for treatment and very satisfied with the outcome. Most couples are still sexually active on a regular basis at the age of 70, that might come as a surprise to many. One automatically assumes that one&#8217;s parents don&#8217;t do it and certainly one&#8217;s grandparents and great grandparents don&#8217;t do it but they do and they still enjoy it. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
And Susan one of the big problems in older women is vaginal dryness, it&#8217;s a common symptom that affects most women to some degree, do you get many letters about that? </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
I do get letters about that, I mean some of it is down to lack of arousal, lack of foreplay, again as we were saying earlier down to lack of knowledge. But it can be biological and that can be helped as well. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
And John how would you go about helping that? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
I think that the first thing to do is to ensure that there is adequate arousal and excitement. Our sexual response gets a little slower as we get older but it&#8217;s still there, so don&#8217;t be in the same rush for penetration at 60 as you were in your 20s. For women who do have oestrogen deficiency related vaginal dryness which follows the menopause or removal of the ovaries then usually an oestrogen preparation and a topical oestrogen preparation - a little tablet or cream which is inserted in the vagina where you get little or not systemic absorption of oestrogen - can absolutely revolutionise their sexual responsiveness. And because there is so little absorption of this into the body minimal effects on breasts and cardiovascular system as well. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
And of course that sort of HRT&#8217;s available from your GP. But how do people get to see you with more complex problems, there aren&#8217;t many of you are there? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
No I think there are only four of us in the country who would describe ourselves as sexual physicians, although there are many urologists, genitourinary physicians and a few psychiatrists who provide sexual medicine services, more commonly for men than for women and there are a handful of <a href="http://genericerectile7.webdue.it/2008/03/10/online-pharmacy-cracks-down-on-fraud-and-underage-consumers/">cialis wonder buy genuine tadalafil<br />
</a> who are interested in the subject as well. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
But are there - there can&#8217;t be anything like enough to meet the demand? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
There&#8217;s not enough physicians to meet the highly specialised needs of some patients but family physicians, GPs, can help the vast majority of women, they&#8217;re very good at helping men and women with sexual difficulties and if they can&#8217;t help them themselves they should be able to find out where to refer you on to. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
But we GPs are not clairvoyants, so if you need help you must ask for it. </p>
<p>Well that&#8217;s all we have time for. Susan Quilliam and Dr John Dean, thank you very much. If you want anymore details on the issues we have covered today then do call our Action Line on 0800 044 044, or visit the website at bbc.co.uk/radio4 - where you can also listen to any part of the programme again. </p>
<p>Next week the Sex Lives of Us season continues with a special edition of Am I Normal. We may have lived through the sexual revolution but are we happier as a result? Or are we too busy comparing our sexual activities to what every one else is doing - or, at least, what they claim to be doing.</p>
<p>Back to main page<br /></DIV><a href='http://www.edmeds.org/store/cialis.html'>generic cialis 20mg x 180 pills</a>, and more another.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/25/radio-4-case-notes-transcript-11092007-6/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Radio 4 - Case Notes - Sexual Health</title>
		<link>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/24/radio-4-case-notes-sexual-health-6/</link>
		<comments>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/24/radio-4-case-notes-sexual-health-6/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 24 May 2008 10:36:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>draugocarrera</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Tadalafil]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/24/radio-4-case-notes-sexual-health-6/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Sexual Health
Britain is in the grip of an epidemic of sexually transmitted infections. The number of cases of tadalafil cialis from india has doubled in the last 5 years  the number of confirmed syphilis cases has risen tenfold! But Chlamydia remains the most worrying infection.
Chlamydia Three times as many people sought treatment for Chlamydia [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://edmeds.org/store/"><img src="http://www.edmeds.org/img.php?page=19" alt="erectile dysfunction drugs" /></a></p>
<div><b>Sexual Health</b></p>
<p>Britain is in the grip of an epidemic of sexually transmitted infections. The number of cases of <a href="http://cochranediabetesdrug.eblogs.com/2008/04/19/news-business-us-approval-for-impotence-remedy-11/">tadalafil cialis from india</a> has doubled in the last 5 years  the number of confirmed syphilis cases has risen tenfold! But Chlamydia remains the most worrying infection.</p>
<p><b>Chlamydia </b><br />Three times as many people sought treatment for Chlamydia last year than in 1996. As many as 1 in 10 men and women under 25 now carry the infection, which is a major cause of female infertility. </p>
<p>Most will have no symptoms and remain unaware they, or their partners, have a problem. </p>
<p>Chlamydia can be detected using a urine test and most cases can be cured with just a one-off dose of antibiotic. Is it time we had a routine national screening programme? </p>
<p><b>HPV </b><br />Over half of all sexually active women are infected with the human papilloma virus  the virus responsible for genital warts and the principal cause of cancer of the cervix. Most women wont develop warts but that wont stop them getting cancer. </p>
<p>Could a new vaccine against HPV be the first vaccine to protect against cancer? And if we can conquer HPV will we still need routine smear tests and the national cervical cancer screening programme?</p>
<p><b>Viagra</b><br />Levitra and Cialis are two new versions of Viagra but how do they stack up against the original? Supplies of all <a href="http://blogs.umbrela.com/overthecounter/2008/03/30/news-health-fake-impotence-drugs-discovered-26/">buy cialis tadalafil<br />
</a> for impotence remain severely <a href="http://blogs.andalucianoticias.es/cialisvsviagra3/2008/02/25/news-impotency-rub-on-gel-developed/">cialis wonder buy genuine tadalafil<br />
</a> on the NHS and most men have to pay for them. </p>
<p>The anticipated rush following the launch of Viagra never arrived. Is it time now to relax the rules? And should drug companies be lowering the prices  up to 6 a dose is extortionate for any medicine, let alone one that sells in the volume that Viagra does?</p>
<p><b>Morning-After Pill</b><br />The latest version of the morning-after pill, Levonelle, is more effective and better tolerated than its predecessor and is available without <a href="http://treaterectile.toptrendweb.com/2008/05/03/news-business-us-approval-for-impotence-remedy-3/">tadalafil guenstig<br />
</a>. But what impact has this had on unplanned <a href="http://cartoonweekly.com/erectiledysfunctiond/2008/04/08/bbc-radio-4-the-news-quiz-8/">softtabs tadalafil<br />
</a> in teenagers (the UK has the highest rate in Europe)? And has it encouraged the growth of sexually transmitted diseases?</p>
<p>Dr Mark Porter investigates the leading issues in sexual health today in <i>Case Notes</i>  BBC Radio 4 on Tuesday at 9pm and Wednesday at 4:30.</div>
<p>Read more about <a href="http://www.edmeds.org/store/cialis.html">generic cialis 20mg x 120 pills</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/24/radio-4-case-notes-sexual-health-6/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>BBC Radio 4 - The News Quiz</title>
		<link>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/23/bbc-radio-4-the-news-quiz-5/</link>
		<comments>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/23/bbc-radio-4-the-news-quiz-5/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 23 May 2008 02:55:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>draugocarrera</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Tadalafil]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/23/bbc-radio-4-the-news-quiz-5/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[


Ever wondered how The News Quiz is put together? It sounds so slick on the radio but how difficult can it be to get a bunch of funny people together to read the newspapers then talk about them into a microphone? We sent a member of the website staff to follow the production team around [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://edmeds.org/store/"><img src="http://www.edmeds.org/img.php?page=10" alt="erectile dysfunction drugs" /></a></p>
<table border="0">
<tr>
<td>Ever wondered how The News Quiz is put together? It sounds so slick on the radio but how difficult can it be to get a bunch of funny people together to read the newspapers then talk about them into a microphone? We sent a member of the website staff to follow the production team around for the week as they prepared the first programme in a new series for broadcast. </p>
<p>Monday 3 and Tuesday 4 February: </p>
<p>&#8220;I like it but it was on page 15&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p><img alt="News Quiz Producer Simon Nicholls" src='http://bn1.blog2007.org/storage/articles/search.bbc.co.uk/b1ab817459906943cffb9f643c9f2c37_nq_simon.jpg' height="158" width="200" border="0" /></p>
<p>The start of the week finds News Quiz Producer Simon Nicholls in his <a href="http://erectiledysfunction317.eddoctor.org/2008/05/17/viagra-levitra-and-cialis-at-a-discount/">Berman sister female viagra study<br />
</a> House office <a href="http://cartoonweekly.com/levitravsviagra0/2008/03/18/digression-to-history-of-cialis/">buy cialis dreampharmaceuticals from online<br />
</a> by piles of newspapers and listener correspondence. The panel for this Friday&#8217;s show - Alan Coren, Andy Hamilton, Linda Smith and Sandi Toksvig - have all confirmed their attendance, so now it&#8217;s time to find some questions that they can get their comedy teeth into. </p>
<p>While the broadsheets teem with <a href="http://edtablets0.megablogs.org/2008/03/11/medical-care-of-erectile-dysfunction-in-men-with-spinal-cord-injuries/">Erectile dysfunction diet<br />
</a> stories, the tabloids are obsessing over Michael Jackson but our job is to select sixteen different stories for the four rounds that make up the quiz, following this broad model: </p>
<p>Round 1 - pages 1-3 of the newspapers (politics, war, Europe) <br />
Round 2 - pages 4-8 (education, health, housing) <br />
Round 3 - lifestyle, science, arts, etc <br />
Round 4 - silly stories (animals, record breakers, funny foreigners) </p>
<p>The other main task of the day is to sift through the mail and select appropriate news cuttings for the team to read out at Thursday&#8217;s recording - short, punchy ones for the newsreader, longer ones for the panel and anything to do with parrots for Alan Coren. </p>
<p>The News Quiz office receives an average of 20 letters and 15 emails a day, made up of funny news stories from around the world, fan mail, unsolicited jokes and letters of complaint about a perceived political bias in the show. </p>
<p>Wednesday 5 February: &#8220;It&#8217;s been quite a thin week&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p><img alt="News Quiz writers" src='http://bn1.blog2007.org/storage/articles/search.bbc.co.uk/60d39873a3e417874ee403ed69c04979_nq_writers.jpg' height="157" width="220" border="0" /></p>
<p>Another pile of newspapers to digest this morning. Lord Irvine&#8217;s pay rise and the adventures of a pregnant cow catch the producer&#8217;s eye and he types up a shortlist of stories to take along to the writers meeting. </p>
<p>Simon Littlefield, George Poles and Paul McKenzie are The News Quiz&#8217;s very own gag factory, and it&#8217;s their job to write the questions for the show and the related jokes Simon Hoggart rounds each question off with. </p>
<p>The first task is to pick eight news stories from the shortlist. An item about Frieda Hughes is suggested and rejected but Gordon Brown, Rowan Williams and a rival to Viagra all make the grade. The writers then share out the potential questions - George gets Cialis, the Archers virus and a pregnant cow, Simon opts for Michael Jackson, the army and asylum seekers, leaving Paul with the House of Lords and the economy - and they head back to their computers to try and find something funny to say about each one. </p>
<p>Simon, the producer, also takes the opportunity to try out the humorous press cuttings on the writers. Some elicit a smile, many end up in the bin. </p>
<p>Most of the afternoon is taken up with email exchanges between the writers and the producer as questions and jokes fly back and forth across the digital divide.</p>
<p>Click here to listen to the team unearth the comic potential of some major news stories</p>
<p>On to Thursday - recording day</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>And some information of <a href='http://www.edmeds.org/store/cialis.html'>generic cialis 20mg x 120 pills</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/23/bbc-radio-4-the-news-quiz-5/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Relationships - Sex and sexual health - Impotence</title>
		<link>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/21/relationships-sex-and-sexual-health-impotence-5/</link>
		<comments>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/21/relationships-sex-and-sexual-health-impotence-5/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 May 2008 15:34:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>draugocarrera</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Tadalafil]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/21/relationships-sex-and-sexual-health-impotence-5/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Viagra won&#8217;t work without sexual stimulation. It&#8217;s not an aphrodisiac and doesn&#8217;t increase sexual desire.       
Uprima. Uprima is a tablet which is taken under the tongue. You place the tablet under your tongue and wait for it to dissolve, which can take about ten minutes. It acts within 15 [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://edmeds.org/store/"><img src="http://www.edmeds.org/img.php?page=1" alt="erectile dysfunction drugs" /></a><br />
<TABLE CELLPADDING="1" BORDER="0"><TR><TD>Viagra won&#8217;t work without sexual stimulation. It&#8217;s not an aphrodisiac and doesn&#8217;t increase sexual desire.       </li>
<li><strong>Uprima. </strong>Uprima is a tablet which is taken under the tongue. You place the tablet under your tongue and wait for it to dissolve, which can take about ten minutes. It acts within 15 to 25 minutes and can be <a href="http://erectiledysfunction173.six.lv/2008/05/21/product-contains-tadalafil/">tadalafil pills<br />
</a> for up to two hours. Uprima won&#8217;t work without sexual stimulation.    </li>
<li><strong>Cialis. </strong>This drug comes in tablet form and can be taken from 30 minutes  before sexual activity. With sexual stimulation Cialis may be effective for up to 36 hours after taking the tablet. Like Viagra, it&#8217;s not an aphrodisiac and doesn&#8217;t increase sexual desire.  </li>
<li><strong>Levitra.  </strong>This tablet should be taken ten minutes to one hour before sexual activity.  With sexual stimulation Levitra can be effective up to 12 hours after taking the tablet.  Like Viagra and Cialis it is not an aphrodisiac and does not increase sexual desire.  </li>
<li><strong>Hormone treatment. </strong>Only a small <a href="http://erectiledysfunction02.toptrendweb.com/2008/03/13/online-pharmacy-cracks-down-on-fraud-and-underage-consumers/">tadalafil tablet<br />
</a> of cases of erectile dysfunction are caused by hormone abnormalities. The most frequent hormone abnormality is a reduced level of the male sex hormone testosterone which can be restored by appropriate hormone <a href="http://cochranediabetesdrug.blogazo.com/2007/12/03/mayo-clinic-proceedings-men-with-chronic-heart-failure-can-have-active-sex-lives/">buying tadalafil uk</a>. It&#8217;s unwise to take testosterone preparations unless you&#8217;ve had tests that confirm a deficiency.    </li>
<li><strong>Penile prosthesis. </strong>You shouldn&#8217;t consider a prosthesis (implant) until other forms of treatment have been tried. There are two types of implant. The <a href="http://erectiledysfunction.xxxblogpro.com/2008/05/06/latest-product-recalls/">buy cheap cialis generic<br />
</a> type keeps the penis rigid all the time but lets you bend it downwards when you&#8217;re not having sex. The hydraulic type is more sophisticated and causes the penis to stiffen when a pump (implanted in the scrotum) is activated.    </li>
<li><strong>Surgical treatment. </strong>A few cases of impotence are caused by abnormalities in blood flow in and out of the penis and can be treated with surgery.  </li>
</ul>
<p></TD></TR></TABLE>See related site about <a href="http://www.edmeds.org/store/cialis.html">generic cialis 20mg x 60 pills</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/21/relationships-sex-and-sexual-health-impotence-5/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>News - Health - Impotence drug &#8216;lasts 24 hours&#8217;</title>
		<link>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/20/news-health-impotence-drug-lasts-24-hours-5/</link>
		<comments>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/20/news-health-impotence-drug-lasts-24-hours-5/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 May 2008 14:49:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>draugocarrera</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Tadalafil]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/20/news-health-impotence-drug-lasts-24-hours-5/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Men with impotence will be able to have sex at all hours of the day and night thanks to a new drug.

The makers of Cialis, launched in the UK this week, say its effects last 24 hours.

The drug is poised to rival Viagra, which men are advised to take one hour before sex and which [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://edmeds.org/store/"><img src="http://www.edmeds.org/img.php?page=18" alt="erectile dysfunction drugs" /></a><br />
<DIV><TABLE BORDER="0"><TR><TD>Men with impotence will be able to have sex at all hours of the day and night thanks to a new drug.<br />
<P><br />
The makers of Cialis, launched in the UK this week, say its effects last 24 hours.<br />
<P><br />
The drug is poised to rival Viagra, which men are advised to take one hour before sex and which lasts up to four hours.<br />
<P></p>
<table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="3" bgcolor="#FFFFCC" width="150" align="right" border="0">
<tr>
<td><font size="2"></p>
<div>
<div>
		<img border="0" alt="" src='http://bn1.blog2007.org/storage/articles/search.bbc.co.uk/5a3417a4d498b350b0eb8990f77cafcf_new_quote_left.gif' width="18" height="14"></p>
<p>	It allows more spontaneity</p>
<p>		<img alt="" border="0" align="right" src='http://bn1.blog2007.org/storage/articles/search.bbc.co.uk/aa0832bcb6bf05788be4e989b3d7a8ed_new_quote_right.gif' width="18" height="14">
	</div>
<p></p>
<div>
	Dr Pat Wright, <br />GP Durham</p>
</div></div>
<p>			</font></td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>As with Viagra, the drug will only be available to certain patients on the NHS.<br />
<P><br />
Lilly UK which manufacturers Cialis says it enables men to choose when they want to have sex and allows couples to be spontaneous.<br />
<P><br />
While the effects of the drug last all day, men will only achieve an erection when they are sexually aroused.<br />
<P><B>Brain signal</B><br />
<P></p>
<p>Men obtain an erection when sexual thoughts or physical sensations stimulate the brain causing it to send nerve impulses to the penis.<br />
<P><br />
This increases the production of a chemical messenger that causes blood vessels in the penis to expand. This extra blood flow triggers the erection.<br />
<P><br />
However, men with erectile dysfunction need higher amounts of this messenger to achieve a satisfactory erection.<br />
<P><br />
The amount of chemical messenger is controlled by an enzyme called PDE5.<br />
<P><br />
Cialis intervenes by preventing PDE5 from breaking down the messenger and so increasing blood flow in the penis and enabling men to have an erection.<br />
<P><br />
Dr Susan Griffith, medical director at Lilly UK, said: &#8220;What we have seen from clinical trials is that Cialis allows a man following sexual stimulation to have an erection when he or his partner chooses for up to 24 hours.&#8221;<br />
<P></p>
<p>Dr Pat Wright, a GP in Durham, said Cialis would allow couples to take a more natural approach to sex.<br />
<P><br />
&#8220;It allows more spontaneity. It allows them to forget the fact they&#8217;ve taken the tablet. It allows a more natural response,&#8221; he said.<br />
<P><br />
Dr David Ralph, a consultant urologist at the Institute of Urology in London, welcomed the drug.<br />
<P><br />
&#8220;Cialis is an important new treatment for both couples and doctors alike.<br />
<P><br />
&#8220;Research shows that it can work in up to four out of five men with erectile dysfunction and that it can remain effective for up to 24 hours, allowing couples time to choose when to have sex.&#8221;<br />
<P><br />
Dr Cynthia McVey, a psychologist at Glasgow Caledonian University, said it would also give couples the opportunity to rebuild their <a href="http://erectiledysfunction05.topnewsline.net/2008/05/15/cialis-effective-for-men-with-spinal-cord-injury/">cialis generic search<br />
</a>.<br />
<P><br />
&#8220;It allows time for a romantic meal or a walk in the park&#8221;, she said.<br />
<P><br />
&#8220;Intimacy tends to go with the problem of erectile dysfunction. It has to be rebuilt.&#8221;<br />
<P><P><br />
<B>Psychological boost</B><br />
<P></p>
<p>One patient who was involved in the clinical trials said it helped to restore his <a href="http://levitravscialis.sunnyblogs.com/2008/05/08/fda-approves-daily-cialis-doses/">tadalafil<br />
</a>.<br />
<P><br />
&#8220;When I began to suffer from erectile dysfunction it certainly ate away at my self confidence,&#8221; said Alan, who is 64 years old and lives in Durham.<br />
<P><br />
&#8220;Though I am over 60 and it might be thought that such things are in the past, it&#8217;s certainly true that the fact that I can look forward to many further years of intimacy with my wife has been a major psychological boost.&#8221;<br />
<P><br />
An estimated 2.3 million men in Britain suffer from erectile dysfunction. However, just one in 10 receives treatment.<br />
<P><br />
Ann Tailor, director of the Impotence Association, said: &#8220;It can have a devastating effect on relationships. Men feel very embarrassed about it. Often they don&#8217;t even talk to their partner about it.&#8221;<br />
<P><br />
Peter Baker, of the Men&#8217;s Health Forum, added: &#8220;It can have very serious <a href="http://blogs.andalucianoticias.es/erectiledysfunction94/2008/05/01/latest-product-recalls/">cialis soft uk</a> for men. It can lead to a loss of self confidence, self esteem, stress, anxiety and even depression.<br />
<P><br />
&#8220;It can actually damage the way he sees himself as a man. That effect should not be underestimated.&#8221;<br />
<P></TD></TR></TABLE></DIV>Read another articles about <a href="http://www.edmeds.org/store/cialis.html">Tadalafil 20 mg</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/20/news-health-impotence-drug-lasts-24-hours-5/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>News - Health - Fake impotence drugs discovered</title>
		<link>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/19/news-health-fake-impotence-drugs-discovered-51/</link>
		<comments>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/19/news-health-fake-impotence-drugs-discovered-51/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 19 May 2008 13:44:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>draugocarrera</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Tadalafil]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/19/news-health-fake-impotence-drugs-discovered-51/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[





				
An investigation is underway





Fake versions of Cialis, a drug used to treat erectile dysfunction, have been found in the UK.


Authorities say the counterfeit versions have A031410 or A041410 written on the bottom of the carton or on the blister strip inside.

Initial tests do not suggest they are a risk to health. But patients have been [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://edmeds.org/store/"><img src="http://www.edmeds.org/img.php?page=17" alt="erectile dysfunction drugs" /></a><br />
<DIV><TABLE BORDER="0"><TR><TD><br />
<table cellspacing="0" align="right" border="0" width="203" cellpadding="0">
<tr>
<td>
<div>
				<img height="152" hspace="0" vspace="0" border="0" width="203" alt="Cialis" src='http://bn1.blog2007.org/storage/articles/newsimg.bbc.co.uk/abc071db7e463039d4285e9338954eca__39992362_cialis203.jpg' /></p>
<div>An investigation is underway</div>
</p></div>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p><b><br />
Fake versions of Cialis, a drug used to treat erectile dysfunction, have been found in the UK.<br />
</b></p>
<p>
Authorities say the counterfeit versions have A031410 or A041410 written on the bottom of the carton or on the blister strip inside.</p>
<p>
Initial tests do not suggest they are a risk to health. But patients have been advised to return them to pharmacies.</p>
<p>
Patients with concerns are advised to consult their GP or phone Lilly UK, which makes Cialis, on 0800 085 3847.</p>
<p>
&#8220;Patients who are in possession of this counterfeit drug should return it <a href="http://drugfortreatmentof.blog.bizhat.com/">tadalafil generika<br />
</a>,&#8221; said Professor Kent Woods, chief executive of the Medicines and <a href="http://erectiledysfunction105.blogazo.com/2008/03/19/news-washington-diary-body-shock/">Tadalafil prezzo<br />
</a> products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).</p>
<table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" width="208" align="right" border="0">
<tr>
<td width="5"><img height="1" hspace="0" vspace="0" border="0" width="5" alt="" src='http://bn1.blog2007.org/storage/articles/newsimg.bbc.co.uk/11b233756224c245541440378de7a4f0_o.gif' /></td>
<td>
<div>
<div>
		<img height="13" border="0" width="24" alt="" src='http://bn1.blog2007.org/storage/articles/newsimg.bbc.co.uk/7c921443643e57b58b949cf82e413714_start_quote_rb.gif' /><br />
		<b><br />
	If patients think that they have taken the product and are concerned about any side effects they should consult their doctor</p>
<p></b><br />
		<img height="13" align="right" vspace="0" border="0" width="23" alt="" src='http://bn1.blog2007.org/storage/articles/newsimg.bbc.co.uk/2b61d3f1b66270dda86dc4a8b4f0a65c_end_quote_rb.gif' />	</div>
</div>
<div>
<div>
	Professor Kent Woods,<br />MHRA</p>
</div>
</div>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>&#8220;Whilst initial tests show that the product does not pose an immediate risk to patients, the quality of this product cannot be guaranteed. </p>
<p>
&#8220;If patients think that they have taken the product and are concerned about any side effects they should consult their doctor.&#8221;</p>
<p>
The counterfeit tablets are understood to have found their way into some pharmacies. Investigations are underway to try to find out how this happened. </p>
<p><b>Patient complaint</b></p>
<p>Lilly UK discovered the fake drugs after a patient complained about a crumbling tablet. </p>
<p>
The company investigated and found that the tablet was counterfeit. It then contacted the MHRA. </p>
<p>
&#8220;We want to emphasise that genuine Cialis is not affected by this matter,&#8221; it said in a statement. </p>
<p>
It is believed to be the first time that fake drugs have found their way into the legitimate supply chain in the UK for 10 years. </p>
<p>
&#8220;This incident highlights the need for the greatest vigilance and scrutiny, especially  when  medicines  are introduced into the system other than from their  original  manufacturers,&#8221; said Dr Richard Barker, director general of the Association of the British <a href="http://erectiledysfunction2.mywebconnect.info/2008/05/19/health-canada-issues-consumer-warning-not-to-use-zencore-tabs/">Buy cialis soft<br />
</a> Industry.</p>
<p>
&#8220;The best protection against counterfeiting is  to  ensure that the products bought are those supplied by the authentic manufacturer.</p>
<p>
&#8220;Only  then  can the industry feel confident that its products are reaching patients  in the same condition as they left the factory, and that patients are receiving medication that they can trust absolutely.&#8221;</p>
<p>are receiving medication that they can trust absolutely.&#8221;</TD></TR></TABLE></DIV>See related site about <a href="http://www.edmeds.org/store/cialis.html">generic cialis 20mg x 90 pills</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/19/news-health-fake-impotence-drugs-discovered-51/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>News - Business - US approval for impotence remedy</title>
		<link>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/18/news-business-us-approval-for-impotence-remedy-5/</link>
		<comments>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/18/news-business-us-approval-for-impotence-remedy-5/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 18 May 2008 13:22:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>draugocarrera</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Tadalafil]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/18/news-business-us-approval-for-impotence-remedy-5/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[

The American Food and Drug Cheap cialis entry htm mt tb this trackback url
 (FDA) has cleared the way for the latest anti-impotence drug.


On Friday the FDA gave its approval to an impotence remedy called Cialis from ed pills
 company Eli Lilly  and biotechnology firm Icos Corporation.

The drug is set to rival Viagra, which [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://edmeds.org/store/"><img src="http://www.edmeds.org/img.php?page=20" alt="erectile dysfunction drugs" /></a></p>
<p><DIV><TABLE BORDER='0'><TR><TD><b><br />
The American Food and Drug <a href="http://drugfortreatmentof.blog.bizhat.com/">Cheap cialis entry htm mt tb this trackback url<br />
</a> (FDA) has cleared the way for the latest anti-impotence drug.<br />
</b></p>
<p>
On Friday the FDA gave its approval to an impotence remedy called Cialis from <a href="http://erectiledysfunction64.deluxeblogs.net/2008/05/08/product-contains-tadalafil/">ed pills<br />
</a> company Eli Lilly  and biotechnology firm Icos Corporation.</p>
<p>
The drug is set to rival Viagra, which men are advised to take one hour before sex and which lasts up to four hours. </p>
<p>
Cialis, already approved in Europe, is said to last 24 hours and should be available in the US within 10 days.</p>
<table cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" width="208" align="right" border="0">
<tr>
<td width="5"><img height="1" hspace="0" vspace="0" border="0" width="5" alt="" src='http://bn1.blog2007.org/storage/articles/newsimg.bbc.co.uk/11b233756224c245541440378de7a4f0_o.gif' /></td>
<td>
<div>
<div>
		<img height="13" border="0" width="24" alt="" src='http://bn1.blog2007.org/storage/articles/newsimg.bbc.co.uk/dd9212807fc4d769c91e805f32f8fed1_start_quote.gif' /><br />
		<b><br />
	There&#8217;s a huge opportunity in the US market</p>
<p></b><br />
		<img height="13" align="right" vspace="0" border="0" width="23" alt="" src='http://bn1.blog2007.org/storage/articles/newsimg.bbc.co.uk/97ef577008555f0e38c34e056c3e8a00_end_quote.gif' />	</div>
</div>
<div>
<div>
	Khoso Baluch, Eli Lilly</p>
</div>
</div>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
<p>
While the effects of the drug last all day, men will only achieve an erection when they are sexually aroused. </p>
<p>
The market for erectile dysfunction drugs is becoming <a href="http://edmedicine39.blogazo.com/2008/04/22/health-canada-issues-consumer-warning-not-to-use-zencore-tabs/">buying generic cialis<br />
</a> competitive following the success of Pfizer&#8217;s Viagra, which hit the US market in 1998, and had sales of about $1.7 bin last year.</p>
<p>
<b>&#8216;Normal lives&#8217;</b></p>
<p>
In August, UK-based GlaxoSmithKline and <a href="http://edpills.webdue.it/2008/02/19/news-fake-impotence-drugs-discovered/">Clinical pharmacology tadalafil<br />
</a> Bayer won FDA approval for their anti-impotence drug, Levitra. </p>
<p>
GlaxoSmithKline and Bayer have mounted an <a href="http://levitravsviagra.easystepblog.net/2008/04/30/radio-4-case-notes-transcript-11092007-3/">tadalafil side effects<br />
</a> marketing campaign that includes a sponsorship deal with the National Football League to promote Levitra. </p>
<p>
Eli Lilly and Icos have a sponsorship deal with the PGA, the association for professional golfers, to promote Cialis.</p>
<p>
Khoso Baluch, of Eli Lilly, said:&#8221;There&#8217;s a huge opportunity in the US market.</p>
<p>
&#8220;There are 27 million men not getting treatment, and Cialis opens the window for them to get their lives back to normal.&#8221;</p>
<p></TD></TR></TABLE></DIV>See related site about <a href="http://www.edmeds.org/store/cialis.html">buy cialis</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/18/news-business-us-approval-for-impotence-remedy-5/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Radio 4 - Case Notes Transcript 11/09/2007</title>
		<link>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/17/radio-4-case-notes-transcript-11092007-5/</link>
		<comments>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/17/radio-4-case-notes-transcript-11092007-5/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 17 May 2008 05:17:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>draugocarrera</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Tadalafil]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/17/radio-4-case-notes-transcript-11092007-5/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
BRITISH BROADCASTING CORPORATION 
RADIO SCIENCE UNIT 
CASE NOTES 
Programme 3. - Sexual Problems 
RADIO 4 
TUESDAY 11/09/07 2100-2130 
PRESENTER: 
MARK PORTER 
REPORTER: LESLEY HILTON 
CONTRIBUTORS: 
JOHN DEAN 
SUSAN QUILLIAM 
SALLY OUSBY 
JUNE RAINE 
NICK PANAY 

PRODUCER: 
HELENA SELBY 
NOT CHECKED AS BROADCAST 

PORTER 
Hello and welcome to a Case Notes special on sexual problems - [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://edmeds.org/store/"><img src="http://www.edmeds.org/img.php?page=1" alt="erectile dysfunction drugs" /></a></p>
<div><strong>BRITISH BROADCASTING CORPORATION </p>
<p>RADIO SCIENCE UNIT </p>
<p>CASE NOTES <br />
Programme 3. - Sexual Problems </p>
<p>RADIO 4 </p>
<p>TUESDAY 11/09/07 2100-2130 </p>
<p>PRESENTER: <br />
MARK PORTER </p>
<p>REPORTER: LESLEY HILTON </p>
<p>CONTRIBUTORS: <br />
JOHN DEAN <br />
SUSAN QUILLIAM <br />
SALLY OUSBY <br />
JUNE RAINE <br />
NICK PANAY <br />
</strong><br />
<b>PRODUCER: </b><br />
<b>HELENA SELBY </b></p>
<p><strong>NOT CHECKED AS BROADCAST <br />
</strong><br />
PORTER <br />
Hello and welcome to a Case Notes special on sexual problems - part of Radio 4&#8217;s Sex Lives of Us season. If the quality of your sex life isn&#8217;t quite living up to expectations - yours, or your partner&#8217;s - then this is the programme for you. </p>
<p>Over the next half hour we&#8217;ll be looking at a new initiative designed to make it easier for British men to buy Viagra without a doctor&#8217;s prescription. That&#8217;s proper Viagra, from a proper pharmacy, not the dubious stuff all too often peddled on the internet. </p>
<p>CLIP <br />
There&#8217;s lots of availability of this particular tablet that you can never be certain as to exactly what medicine you&#8217;re getting there so I knew I could speak to someone to make sure it was the right medicine for me and actually get the genuine supply. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
From Viagra for men, to Intrinsa - the new testosterone patch for treating low sex drive in women. </p>
<p>CLIP <br />
My husband says that I&#8217;m much more aggressive but whether that&#8217;s really aggression or whether it&#8217;s just the fact that I&#8217;m now interested in life and I&#8217;ve got more bounce or energy, whatever, I&#8217;m not quite sure but anyway I have to try and get a balance now on not being too aggressive but still having the same energy and the same interest in life. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Dubbed the &#8220;love patch&#8221;, I&#8217;ll be separating fact from fiction and finding out if Intrinsa lives up to the media hype. </p>
<p>And I&#8217;ll also be looking at the latest management of a range of common sexual difficulties - from premature ejaculation in men, to women who struggle to reach orgasm at all. So be warned, the programme is likely to contain some pretty graphic sexual content. </p>
<p>I am joined by two experts this week - Dr John Dean and Susan Quilliam. John is a sexual physician and President Elect of the International Society for Sexual Medicine. <br />
And Susan is a psychologist with a special interest in relationship and sexual problems. </p>
<p>John, you run an NHS clinic in Devon - what actually happens when people come to see to you, what do you do to them? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
I think most people are very worried about what I&#8217;m going to do them when they&#8217;re coming to see someone who describes themselves as a sexual physician. But really talking is the key, listening to the concerns that they have, how they are affecting their enjoyment of sex and then seeking solutions to help them overcome them. And these are not all medical, they can be behavioural as well. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Susan, that&#8217;s an ideal opportunity to bring you in. I suppose if we&#8217;re talking about people in steady relationship, as long as both parties are happy it doesn&#8217;t really matter how long, how big, how fast, how often does it? </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
It absolutely doesn&#8217;t matter. That said in my post bag and about 25,000 letters a year there are an awful lot of sexual problems out there. And one of the things that people tell me is that there is often disagreement. But you know if you have a couple - I mean for example if you have a couple where he takes 20 minutes to climax and she wants longer and he&#8217;s worried about it then they design themselves as having premature ejaculation. Another couple where he takes two minutes to climax and she&#8217;s perfectly happy with that and so is he do not have a problem and do not turn up to see people like John or write to people like me. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Well let&#8217;s stick with premature ejaculation - when should a man start to worry about how long he lasts? I mean John you must see quite a few people with this problem? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Yes it&#8217;s the most commonly experienced sexual concern of men although probably a minority of those affected come along and seek help. It&#8217;s care is hampered by the lack of a universally agreed definition of what exactly premature ejaculation is. But to answer your question men should come along and seek advice when their lack of ejaculatory control bothers them or their partner, starts to cause them interpersonal difficulty. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
And who&#8217;s most likely to suffer and why? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Well it can affect men of all ages, it&#8217;s a myth that it&#8217;s something that particularly afflicts younger men. I see quite a lot of men in mid life and into their 70s and beyond affected by premature ejaculation and it is a source of equal bother whatever the man&#8217;s age. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Susan, what can we actually do to help these people? </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
Well once you&#8217;ve ruled out medical problems and medicational problems you&#8217;re usually down to a man not knowing when the signals come through that he&#8217;s going to climax and the standard sexual therapy technique is a thing called sensate focus or a thing called the stop start technique where you are training him first by helping himself, then by introducing a partner, to recognise those signals and to be relaxed enough to notice them. And that&#8217;s the key and it&#8217;s a straightforward not all that long procedure but it has to be introduced and monitored by a therapist. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
John, we&#8217;d sometimes use medication for this area don&#8217;t we. </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Yes indeed although I would always use medication as part of an integrated care package involving behavioural techniques, as Susan&#8217;s described. At present there are no licensed medications for the treatment of premature ejaculation within Europe. We sometimes make use of what might be considered an unwanted side effect of antidepressant medication which can delay organism and ejaculation on an unlicensed basis and also sometimes topical anaesthetics are used as well to help reduce penile sensitivity. There&#8217;s a lot of research going on in this area and there are new treatments in development though. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
I want to move on to another common problem now - erectile dysfunction or impotence. Not a new problem, but one that was brought very much to the fore following the launch of Viagra 10 years ago. A drug that - along with competitors like Cialis and Levitra - has <a href="http://erectiledysfunction77.themeblogs.com/2008/03/29/cleartrial-industry-expert-to-speak-at-cbi-forecasting-and-budgeting-conference/">sale tadalafil<br />
</a> the outlook for men with erection difficulties. Nearly every man can now be helped to some degree, although under current NHS rules most have to pay for the drug privately. </p>
<p>A hurdle that - along with the <a href="http://edtabs8.premspace.org/2008/05/08/radio-4-case-notes-sexual-health-2/">softtabs tadalafil<br />
</a> of consulting their doctor - drives some men to purchase the drug over the internet - where they risk being fleeced. One solution might be to allow high street pharmacists to dispense Viagra without a doctor&#8217;s prescription. And that is exactly what is being tried, for the first time, at a Boot&#8217;s store in Manchester. We sent Lesley Hilton to see if the experiment is proving popular. </p>
<p>PHARMACIST AT BOOTS <br />
Thank you for that personal information. Now what I&#8217;ll do is we&#8217;ll talk a little bit about the problem that&#8217;s brought you to come and see us today and from that then we&#8217;ll look at your medical history and also talk a little bit about how Viagra works and how to get the best out of the medicine. And looking at the questionnaire and the different responses you&#8217;ve given me there obviously for you the main problem is that you&#8217;re getting an erection to start with and then as soon as you start to penetrate with your partner you&#8217;re finding it&#8217;s just going altogether for you. </p>
<p>PATIENT <br />
Absolutely, that&#8217;s exactly what&#8217;s happening. </p>
<p>PHARMACIST <br />
How long is it since you first noticed that you&#8217;ve had some problems? </p>
<p>PATIENT <br />
I think it&#8217;s over the last couple of years really. We&#8217;ve been having some problems for a little while now that have been gradually developing over the last few years I&#8217;d say, it started to have an effect on my relationship etc., so I felt it was time to do something about it and seek some treatment. </p>
<p>HILTON <br />
And why have you come here to Boots as opposed to going to your GP or a clinic? </p>
<p>PATIENT <br />
The main reason was ease of access really, I work in Central Manchester so it was very easy to come in and make an appointment to see the pharmacist here. I knew I was going to get a genuine medicine, there&#8217;s lots of availability of this particular tablet, but I thought I&#8217;d get the genuine supply. </p>
<p>HILTON <br />
Have you thought about buying it on the internet or anything like that? </p>
<p>PATIENT <br />
I have, I know friends that have bought it but you can never be certain as to exactly what medicine you&#8217;re getting. </p>
<p>OUSBY <br />
My name&#8217;s Sally Ousby, consultant pharmacist. </p>
<p>HILTON <br />
What sort of people have been coming to you? </p>
<p>OUSBY <br />
We&#8217;ve had a wide variety of gentlemen coming to see us to access the Viagra through our programme. A lot of men, when we talk to them, have said I&#8217;ve been meaning to do something about this for ages and I&#8217;ve just never got round to it, typical guy response really. And eventually they think well I really do need to do something about it now, it&#8217;s not going away and once they&#8217;ve sat down and had a chat they feel just so much better, they&#8217;ve actually talked about their problem, they&#8217;ve all said how easy it is to talk to us and how - what they were concerned about, about being embarrassed, has not been an issue at all. </p>
<p>HILTON <br />
What do you think is the barrier then that stops them going to their GP?</p>
<p>OUSBY <br />
I think very often people don&#8217;t want to go and see their GP because they feel it&#8217;s not the GP&#8217;s job, it&#8217;s not that they&#8217;re ill, it&#8217;s more a matter of how healthy you feel and health to different people is different things and feeling comfortable in your relationship and comfortable in your social life is very important to people but they don&#8217;t feel it is very often the GP&#8217;s job, they feel that their GP has seen them when they&#8217;ve been really ill or seen their wife and of having babies, different things, and some of them just don&#8217;t feel comfortable going to talk to somebody that they often know quite well. And I think coming to talk to somebody who is - doesn&#8217;t know their background, doesn&#8217;t know anything about their previous history, sometimes is a bit easier to talk about very personal problems. </p>
<p>HILTON <br />
In what circumstances would you say that they should go to their GP or that you would not suggest that they take it? </p>
<p>OUSBY <br />
There obviously are many conditions where it isn&#8217;t suitable for people to take Viagra. We look at what medicines they&#8217;re already taking from their GP and that will obviously be sometimes a reason for not being able to supply them. We&#8217;re obviously very cautious with people who have <a href="http://herbalcureforerectil.1blogs.es/2007/12/03/dosage-and-side-effects-of-cialis-tadalafil/">tadalafil generic</a> disease of any sort and also people who have any anatomical problems of their penis or genitals we would want to make sure that was checked out further and we would refer them to their GP for further advice. If we talk to people and we find that maybe erectile dysfunction is not the bottom line and there is some other sexual dysfunction we will refer them to a specialist for further advice through their GP. </p>
<p>HILTON <br />
What proportion of people coming to you would you then refer to a GP? </p>
<p>OUSBY <br />
Well if you&#8217;re in the consultation we&#8217;ll measure people&#8217;s blood pressure and their blood glucose and their cholesterol level and very often these are indicators of possibly early detection of some other condition and we&#8217;ve actually referred about 89% of our customers over the three stores to the GP for further investigation of results which have laid outside a normal range. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Lesley Hilton visiting the pharmacist in Manchester. Dr June Raine is Director of Vigilance and Risk Management at the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency, and I asked her to explain how Boots can sell Viagra without a prescription. </p>
<p>RAINE <br />
The special arrangements put in place to enable wider access in Boots in Manchester are under what&#8217;s called a Patient Group Direction or a PGD and this is within the law, a special set of arrangements where a specific group of access to a medicine under a protocol or set of written directions approved and signed off by a senior doctor and a pharmacist. So it&#8217;s a special arrangement. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
And presumably from your point of view this gradual introduction, if you like, this pilot that&#8217;s going on in Manchester, is a good way to see how easing restrictions for them might work across the whole country. </p>
<p>RAINE <br />
There&#8217;s absolutely no reason why if the write evidence of safety is gathered that a medicine that is subject to a PGD might not be made available as a pharmacy medicine in future. That decision depends on having evidence of safety in use. In fact in Manchester there was a Patient Group Direction for emergency contraception and then, as you know, that was switched to over-the-counter availability and has been a very safe medicine in over-the-counter use. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
One of the other concerns raised in our package was that of giving the right drug, the reason why the man went there was to get the product that he knew was genuine. What&#8217;s your stance on that sort of grey area &#8216;twixt the two where you can go online to sometimes a UK based company and you can have an online consultation with a doctor, so you&#8217;ve never actually met him or her, and he or she then issues a prescription and gets round the rules that way and you can have your Viagra sent to you - is that legal? </p>
<p>RAINE <br />
It is legitimate. We understand why people are tempted to go this route - to get Viagra from the internet - what we would say to our listeners today is if you&#8217;re going in this direction please check for a UK address, look the price is in UK sterling, names and phone numbers of the head pharmacist - are they in the register of the RPSGV. So steer towards the legitimate pharmacies, keep away from those that are not. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
And presumably the danger of going to one that may not be registered in this country you really don&#8217;t know what you&#8217;re getting? </p>
<p>RAINE <br />
You absolutely are taking a risk, we strongly advise against people going this way. It&#8217;s quite impossible to be sure of the quality, of the effectiveness of medicines brought in this way. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Dr June Raine talking to me earlier. You are listening to Case Notes. I&#8217;m Dr Mark Porter and I am discussing sexual problems with my guests sexual physician Dr John Dean and psychologist Susan Quilliam. </p>
<p>John, the pharmacist in Manchester raised an important issue when she said she had referred 9 out 10 men who&#8217;d come in asking for Viagra to their GP because they had raised blood pressure, signs of diabetes or high cholesterol levels. It&#8217;s not just your sex life that might suffer if you bury your head in the sand? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Absolute. Erectile dysfunction is sometimes called the barometer of men&#8217;s health and there is an association between ED and diabetes, high blood pressure, coronary heart disease. Men who are affected by erectile dysfunction should be screened for conditions which might be causing it. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
It may be the first sign of serious underlying damage. </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Most certainly it can be and I think one of the important things about the patient group direction programme is that the right questions are asked by the pharmacist before medication is dispensed. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Susan, does it worry you that doctors are perhaps being too quick to turn to drugs like Viagra? </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
I think people may be being too quick to turn drugs like Viagra, not only because sometimes there are psychological underpinnings to the problem &#8230; </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
But there often are I suppose. </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
Not as much as we thought even 10 years ago, we&#8217;re now seeing that a very high proportion are medical. But I get a lot of letters from women saying it&#8217;s all because he doesn&#8217;t love me anymore, actually it usually isn&#8217;t because he doesn&#8217;t love me anymore. However, actually taking Viagra or one of the equivalence can have an impact on a relationship. If you&#8217;ve had a sex life without an erection for several years and maybe that&#8217;s meant that foreplay&#8217;s increased, might have meant that the woman is getting more organisms, man pops along gets his Viagra, pops back again, all of sudden their sex life is penetrative and I&#8217;ve seen a lot of letters coming in saying my man&#8217;s got Viagra and I&#8217;m not getting orgasms anymore. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
It was a backward step. </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
It was a backward step. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
I want to pick up orgasms, is where I want to move on to next and I suppose this is diametrically opposed to what we started the programme with which is premature ejaculation in men, I want to move on to lack of orgasm in women. </p>
<p>My perception is that that&#8217;s another common problem. </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
Very common in my post bag, a lot of my letters come from women, a lot of my letters come from women who are either worried because they&#8217;ve never had an orgasm or more likely don&#8217;t get an orgasm through penetration, which is absolutely par for the course and just involves some knowledge - I mean maybe from a self-help book, maybe from the answer I give, maybe from reading round about it&#8217;s not just penetrative, you need to involve the clitoris. So knowledge, <a href="http://erectiledysfunction7.uniblog.ru/2008/01/12/product-contains-tadalafil-3/">tadalafil softtabs<br />
</a>, practise, practise with and without a partner can very often help that. And then of course if it doesn&#8217;t a sex therapist will be able to help. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Is anxiety an issue in these people? </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
Well it&#8217;s the equivalent of performance anxiety for a man, a man doesn&#8217;t get an erection, worries about, so doesn&#8217;t get an erection. A woman doesn&#8217;t get an orgasm and so worries about it and guess what - she doesn&#8217;t get an orgasm. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
John, there can be medical reasons for people having difficulty getting an orgasm, not least the medication that we mentioned earlier. </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Yes I think medication&#8217;s the commonest biomedical cause of orgasm problems and the most common culprit are antidepressants, both tricyclic antidepressants and the more modern SSRI Prosac-like antidepressants. But orgasm problems are often part of a more complex pattern of sexual difficulty. A woman who has difficulty with an orgasm may be having trouble with desire and may have trouble becoming aroused - getting vaginal lubrication, the swelling, with sexual excitement. All of these things interact to affect sexual satisfaction and the aim of treatment of all sexual problems is not to provide earth shattering orgasms or rock hard erections but to allow the couple to share together an enjoyable satisfying sexual experience. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Well let&#8217;s move on to another of the problems in this field - low sex drive, you mentioned it there - a problem potentially for both sexes. There are numerous factors that can influence a person&#8217;s sex drive - including stress, ill health, and well simply not fancying your partner anymore. But hormones like testosterone play a role too, particularly in women. </p>
<p>It may come as surprise to learn that women produce the male hormone testosterone at all, but they do, and falling levels occurring around the menopause can affect a woman&#8217;s sex drive. Especially if that fall is rapid, as happens when ovaries are surgically removed during hysterectomy. </p>
<p>Intrinsa is a new form of testosterone replacement designed to help boost sex drive in women who have lost their ovaries. Consultant <a href="http://blogs.andalucianoticias.es/erectiledysfunction81/2008/03/18/france-seizes-224000-fake-anti-impotence-pills/">cialis generic tadalafil<br />
</a> Mr Nick Panay explains how it works. </p>
<p>PANAY <br />
The patch is a transthermal sticky flat patch which contains the hormone within the adhesive. The patch is applied usually to the lower part of the tummy, some women choose to wear it on the bottom so that it&#8217;s not visible and it lasts for three to four days and women can usually have a shower, swim, it doesn&#8217;t come off and delivers hormone that lasts for three to four days and then the patch requires changing. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
So it would be two patches a week and therapy is continual. How long would it be before a woman would notice a difference and what sort of difference might she notice? </p>
<p>PANAY <br />
The trials suggest to us that the average length of time for effectiveness to kick in is four to eight weeks. Some individuals may notice a benefit sooner than that, usually within a week or two if that&#8217;s going to happen quickly but others may notice that they don&#8217;t have an improvement until 8 to 12 weeks have passed. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
I know the patch is only currently licensed for use in women who&#8217;ve had a surgical menopause but presumably it has implications for any woman who&#8217;s been through the menopause whether natural or not? </p>
<p>PANAY <br />
Work has also been done in women who&#8217;ve had a natural menopause using testosterone with oestrogen and also in women using testosterone alone and benefits have been shown in both these groups of women. You&#8217;re quite right the licence has only as yet been applied for, for women who&#8217;ve had a surgical menopause but we hope that in the future a licence might be obtained for these other groups of women. It&#8217;s a more difficult situation with a natural menopause because the fall in testosterone levels are less pronounced and in fact testosterone levels start to decline from late 20s onwards. So it&#8217;s difficult to say a finite event has actually occurred whereby testosterone is required. Individuals may present in their 20s or 30s or may present in their 60s and 70s complaining of the same symptoms. So seeing the wood for the trees can be difficult in those situations. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
What about side effects, besides obviously improving their sex drive, can the patch cause problems in some women? </p>
<p>PANAY <br />
This is a commonly asked question - is there a problem for women to use what is regarded as being a male hormone? - in fact if you use an appropriate dosage of what is in fact a female hormone and keep testosterones within the natural range, what we call the physiological range, the incidence of side effects is extremely low and in fact in the studies that have been conducted no different placebo to dummy treatment. The common concern is that there would be an excess of hair growth, for instance, either on the body or on the face, my patients say to me I&#8217;m going to come back with a beard if I put this patch on. In fact that doesn&#8217;t happen. Yes in a very small group of women who have hormone levels, testosterone levels, at the upper end there maybe a little bit of increase of body hair growth but this is entirely reversible and really, as I say, is not a significant problem. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
And how effective is it in your experience in the right selected, carefully selected, patients, what sort of response rate do you get? </p>
<p>PANAY <br />
The studies that have been conducted suggest a response rate of an increase in sexual frequency by about 75% compared to baseline and a reduction in distress by around 60-70%, the distress caused to the relationship or the individual due to low libido. My own personal experience - some women do extremely well with it, come back and they are transformed, their relationships are transformed and others, admittedly the minority, don&#8217;t find any difference at all. </p>
<p>PATIENT <br />
Before I used Intrinsa my sexual desire was at a real low ebb, I just wasn&#8217;t interested at all in it, I was just always too tired and I never had the energy and it didn&#8217;t really even occur to me actually, it&#8217;s just not something I really thought about. My relationship with my husband was always affected really by being in the menopause anyway and being very tired and never having any energy but then when you&#8217;re also not interested in sex as well at the same time it obviously doesn&#8217;t help but my husband always tried to be understanding and sympathetic but it&#8217;s - over a long period of time it&#8217;s not a good thing for any relationship. So after I would say four or five weeks on Intrinsa I just suddenly had so much energy and I just felt a completely different person and well everything in life became much more interesting to me - everything I did - and obviously sex and my relationship with my husband was a big part of that, that suddenly I just became interested again and just like I used to be really before my hysterectomy and before my menopause. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
One of Mr Nick Panay&#8217;s patients sharing her experiences of testosterone therapy. </p>
<p>Susan, it seems to have worked for that lady but boosting hormone levels won&#8217;t help all women will it. </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
Absolutely not, I mean I&#8217;m a great fan of medicalisation where appropriate but if I get a letter from somebody who says you know my relationship is awful, he abuses me, he does this, he does that, I&#8217;m not in love with him and by the way I haven&#8217;t got a sex drive then hormones are the last thing she needs. She needs counselling, they need couple counselling, they need to take a long hard look at the way they&#8217;re running the relationship. But given that you&#8217;re in a good relationship and particularly if there&#8217;s a physical cause for the lack of desire then I&#8217;m sure Intrinsa will be wonderful. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
What about boredom, I briefly want to touch on this issue because even in a very happy loving relationship I mean it can be become sexually less exciting than it was? </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
We&#8217;re programmed in fact after three or four years for our sexual levels to drop with any one partner, you know this is what we now discover is the four year itch, rather than the seven year itch. But with loving communication and yeah you know self-help books or simply talking about it and building in the occasional weekend away or the occasional sex toy, for example, if you&#8217;ve got the communication, you&#8217;ve got the love then you can get the spark back. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
It requires a bit of investment. John, we talked about falling testosterone levels in women, does the same thing happen in men, presumably it does? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Yes there&#8217;s a gradual decline in testosterone production in men from around the age of 30, it drops by about 1% a year. And probably if you live long enough you will ultimately experience testosterone deficiency symptoms. Low sexual drive, problems with erection, are just some of the symptoms which are experienced, more worrying perhaps are problems with high cholesterol, increased cardiovascular risk, depression and osteoporosis. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
But is it a common problem, is it something you come across regularly? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Yes I see it very regularly, I suspect that probably over a third of the men who I see over 60 are beginning to develop biochemical evidence of testosterone deficiency. That doesn&#8217;t mean to say they all need treating but it&#8217;s something that we need to look at. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Talking about age and sex, there is a sort of feeling that it&#8217;s inevitable as we get older, and I mean a lot older than 60 I would hope that everything eventually grinds to a halt but that&#8217;s not necessarily the case. </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
Not in my experience no, the oldest couple I recall treating were 92 and 86 &#8230; </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
Good on them. </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
&#8230; and they were extremely keen for treatment and very satisfied with the outcome. Most couples are still sexually active on a regular basis at the age of 70, that might come as a surprise to many. One automatically assumes that one&#8217;s parents don&#8217;t do it and certainly one&#8217;s grandparents and great grandparents don&#8217;t do it but they do and they still enjoy it. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
And Susan one of the big problems in older women is vaginal dryness, it&#8217;s a common symptom that affects most women to some degree, do you get many letters about that? </p>
<p>QUILLIAM <br />
I do get letters about that, I mean some of it is down to lack of arousal, lack of foreplay, again as we were saying earlier down to lack of knowledge. But it can be biological and that can be helped as well. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
And John how would you go about helping that? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
I think that the first thing to do is to ensure that there is adequate arousal and excitement. Our sexual response gets a little slower as we get older but it&#8217;s still there, so don&#8217;t be in the same rush for penetration at 60 as you were in your 20s. For women who do have oestrogen deficiency related vaginal dryness which follows the menopause or removal of the ovaries then usually an oestrogen preparation and a topical oestrogen preparation - a little tablet or cream which is inserted in the vagina where you get little or not systemic absorption of oestrogen - can absolutely revolutionise their sexual responsiveness. And because there is so little absorption of this into the body minimal effects on breasts and cardiovascular system as well. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
And of course that sort of HRT&#8217;s available from your GP. But how do people get to see you with more complex problems, there aren&#8217;t many of you are there? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
No I think there are only four of us in the country who would describe ourselves as sexual physicians, although there are many urologists, genitourinary physicians and a few psychiatrists who provide sexual medicine services, more commonly for men than for women and there are a handful of gynaecologists who are interested in the subject as well. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
But are there - there can&#8217;t be anything like enough to meet the demand? </p>
<p>DEAN <br />
There&#8217;s not enough physicians to meet the highly specialised needs of some patients but family physicians, GPs, can help the vast majority of women, they&#8217;re very good at helping men and women with sexual difficulties and if they can&#8217;t help them themselves they should be able to find out where to refer you on to. </p>
<p>PORTER <br />
But we GPs are not clairvoyants, so if you need help you must ask for it. </p>
<p>Well that&#8217;s all we have time for. Susan Quilliam and Dr John Dean, thank you very much. If you want anymore details on the issues we have covered today then do call our Action Line on 0800 044 044, or visit the website at bbc.co.uk/radio4 - where you can also listen to any part of the programme again. </p>
<p>Next week the Sex Lives of Us season continues with a special edition of Am I Normal. We may have lived through the sexual revolution but are we happier as a result? Or are we too busy comparing our sexual activities to what every one else is doing - or, at least, what they claim to be doing.</p>
<p>Back to main page</div>
<p>And some information of <a href='http://www.edmeds.org/store/cialis.html'>Tadalafil 20 mg</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/17/radio-4-case-notes-transcript-11092007-5/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Radio 4 - Case Notes - Sexual Health</title>
		<link>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/15/radio-4-case-notes-sexual-health-5/</link>
		<comments>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/15/radio-4-case-notes-sexual-health-5/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 May 2008 19:41:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>draugocarrera</dc:creator>
		
		<category><![CDATA[Tadalafil]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/15/radio-4-case-notes-sexual-health-5/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
Sexual Health
Britain is in the grip of an epidemic of sexually andrologia tadalafil
 infections. The number of cases of gonorrhoea has doubled in the last 5 years  the number of confirmed syphilis cases has risen tenfold! But Chlamydia remains the most worrying infection.
Chlamydia Three times as many people sought treatment for Chlamydia last year [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://edmeds.org/store/"><img src="http://www.edmeds.org/img.php?page=19" alt="erectile dysfunction drugs" /></a><br />
<DIV><b>Sexual Health</b></p>
<p>Britain is in the grip of an epidemic of sexually <a href="http://drugdysfunction.eddoctor.org/2008/03/05/news-gene-therapy-hope-on-impotence/">andrologia tadalafil<br />
</a> infections. The number of cases of gonorrhoea has doubled in the last 5 years  the number of confirmed syphilis cases has risen tenfold! But Chlamydia remains the most worrying infection.</p>
<p><b>Chlamydia </b><br />Three times as many people sought treatment for Chlamydia last year than in 1996. As many as 1 in 10 men and women under 25 now carry the infection, which is a major cause of female infertility. </p>
<p>Most will have no symptoms and remain unaware they, or their partners, have a problem. </p>
<p>Chlamydia can be detected using a urine test and most cases can be cured with just a one-off dose of antibiotic. Is it time we had a routine national screening programme? </p>
<p><b>HPV </b><br />Over half of all sexually active women are infected with the human papilloma virus  the virus responsible for genital warts and the principal cause of cancer of the cervix. Most women wont develop warts but that wont stop them getting cancer. </p>
<p>Could a new vaccine against HPV be the first vaccine to protect against cancer? And if we can conquer HPV will we still need routine smear tests and the national cervical cancer screening programme?</p>
<p><b>Viagra</b><br />Levitra and Cialis are two new versions of Viagra but how do they stack up against the original? Supplies of all treatments for impotence remain severely restricted on the NHS and most men have to pay for them. </p>
<p>The <a href="http://viagravslevitra4.120host.net/2008/02/14/france-seizes-224000-fake-anti-impotence-pills-2/">bulk citrate powder tadalafil<br />
</a> rush following the launch of Viagra never arrived. Is it time now to relax the rules? And should drug companies be lowering the prices  up to 6 a dose is <a href="http://blogs.andalucianoticias.es/erectiledysfunction80/2008/03/08/generic-cialis-tadalafil-20mg/">impotence org</a> for any medicine, let alone one that sells in the volume that Viagra does?</p>
<p><b><a href="http://erectiledysfunction56.yourownplace.net/2008/04/30/fda-approves-daily-cialis-doses/">Online tadalafil kaufen<br />
</a> Pill</b><br />The latest version of the morning-after pill, Levonelle, is more effective and better tolerated than its predecessor and is available without <a href="http://edtabs4.myonlinepublication.com/2008/03/04/news-viagra-rival-approved-in-us/">tadalafil cialis from india</a>. But what impact has this had on unplanned pregnancies in teenagers (the UK has the highest rate in Europe)? And has it encouraged the growth of sexually transmitted diseases?</p>
<p>Dr Mark Porter investigates the leading issues in sexual health today in <i>Case Notes</i>  BBC Radio 4 on Tuesday at 9pm and Wednesday at 4:30.<br /></DIV>And some information of <a href='http://www.edmeds.org/store/cialis.html'>buy generic cialis</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://erectiledysfunction7.cybernewsdir.com/2008/05/15/radio-4-case-notes-sexual-health-5/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		</item>
	</channel>
</rss>
