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Men's Common Health
Issue -- ED problem
by Nishant Bhargava
A number of drugs can cause sexual dysfunction in both women and men.
Determining the potential benefits of vardenafil, tadalafil, or sildenafil is
much more complex than for drugs that are used to treat cancer, heart disease,
or high blood pressure, for example, where one of the potential benefits may be
increased survival or avoidance of a heart attack or stroke. It is unlikely that
untreated ED contributes to decreased survival, even though it may contribute to
emotional distress and strained relationships.
Viagra, it seems, causes sperm cells to premature release digestive enzymes that
normally break down the wall of the egg. As a result, sperm from men who take
Viagra can no longer fertilize eggs as effectively.
In the United States and around the world, men who suffer from obvious
nutritional deficiencies, hormonal imbalances caused by statin drugs, and an
alarming lack of physical exercise are increasingly turning to Viagra to restore
their youthful sexual performance. But I've got news for all Viagra fans:
healthy men keep it up well into their 70's and 80's without Viagra. If you're
drooping at age 40, you are suffering from some rather serious health problems,
and prescription drugs are probably part of the problem. Taking statins, for
example, interferes with your body's ability to create cholesterol. And
cholesterol is the raw ingredient out of which sex hormones are manufactured. By
taking statins, you're effectively blocking your sex hormones and practically
guaranteeing you'll stay limp!
Lack of physical fitness is another big factor: men who exercise regularly (and
especially those who engage in strength training) rarely have performance
problems. That's because exercise generates natural hormones that keep you
youthful and able.
A new study is showing that recreational use of Viagra is growing rapidly in men
under 45 years of age. From 1998 to 2002, the use of Viagra in men under
forty-five tripled, says the study, which looked at 5 million insured American
males. What this study indicates is that Viagra is being used as a recreational
drug, not as a drug to treat a medical condition. Thus, it belongs more in the
category of pot, crack, heroin, or meth rather than being a medicinal
pharmaceutical.
Another part of this that surprises me is that young men actually need Viagra. I
think this is bizarre, and it's obviously the result of extremely poor health on
the part of the younger generation today due to their mass consumption of junk
foods, soft drinks, and food ingredients that deplete their nutrition (see
related ebook on nutrition) and alter their libido. In addition, there is an
alarming lack of physical exercise among today's youth, and this impairs the
sexual performance in younger males.
The very fact that young males actually think they need this drug is all by
itself alarming. But it's even more alarming to realize that Pfizer appears to
be doing very little to restrict the sales of Viagra for recreational use.
For more information on this Article:
http://www.viagrapunch.com
This article is reprinted with permission from www.WritingCareer.com
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