Time period III Reflection Results Show Effectuality of ED Pills
New York (MedscapeWire) June 5 — According to the results of a new time period III test, IC351 ( Cialis, Lilly Icos) was effective in treating erectile dysfunction in a age of drawing participants.
In the honours of 2 other clinical trials conducted to evaluate temporal property of reactivity, both of which were also presented at the AUA geographical point, 61 men with mild to severe ED were randomized to receive IC351 10 mg or medicament.
After taking IC351, the men were evaluated by RigiScan, a style for measuring the trait and time of erections, during demonstration to visual sexual sex.
Viagra reverses Infertility
Viagra is well know in treating erictile dysfunction in men but it may help infertility in women also The anti-impotence drug Viagra may be able to help previously infertile women become pregnant, that is for women whose infertility is as a result of a thin lining of the uterus. In a US study three out of four previously infertile women who used Viagra became pregnant. A thin lining of the uterus prevents the embryo from attaching to the wall of the uterus.
Female Sexual Dysfunction
Female Sexual Dysfunction: A Case Study of Disease Mongering and Activist Resistance
The creation and promotion of “female sexual dysfunction” is a textbook case of disease mongering by the pharmaceutical industry and by other agents of medicalization, such as health and science journalists, healthcare professionals, public relations and advertising firms, contract research organizations, and others in the “medicalization industry.” Whether one relies on Lynn Payer’s original definition of disease mongering (“trying to convince essentially well people that they are sick, or slightly sick people that they are very ill”), her checklist, or the analysis of our pill-popping society that was recently offered by Greg Critser, the sequence of events and cast of participants involved in FSD matches the classic disease-mongering tactics.
Brand vs Generic
Though they are called “generic”, these prescription drugs are expected to meet the same standards required of the innovator or brand name product.
What is the difference between a Generic and Name-Brand Drug?
A Name-Brand drug is marketed under a specific trade name by a pharmaceutical manufacturer. In most cases, Name-Brand drugs are still under patent protection, meaning the manufacturer is the sole source for the product but in many Countries around the world this is not the case and a generic alternative is readily available . A generic drug is made with the same active ingredients in the same dosage form as a brand name drug. The generic drug is therapeutically equivalent to the brand name drug but is sold under its chemical or “generic” name.
Viagra Can Make Men Hard Of Hearing
Pfizer (PFE) has a new ad campaign for its erectile dysfunction drug Viagra. The marketing message is all over TV and in little video clips online. Reuters.com appears to have one of the ads on every page. It is an nauseating vignette of several men, about 50 years old, singing the praises of the ED-drug while playing a guitar, piano, and bass. “Viva Viagra” indeed.
Now word comes that Viagra and other ED drugs can make some men hard of hearing. That may be a blessing when one of the “Viva Viagra” ads comes onto a TV or PC screen.
