and their health, the BBC News website talks to racing driver Sir Stirling Moss about his erectile uk can cialis female tadalafil take.
Sir Stirling, 76, started racing at the age of 18 and soon made his name in Formula One, Two, Three and hill climbs, sports and touring car races as well as rallies and world speed record events.
An accident at the Goodwood track in 1962 left him partially paralysed for six months and ended his Grand Prix career, although he continued to race historic cars.
Sir Stirling, a spokesman for SortED in 10, the education campaign sponsored by drug’s generika sildenafil tadalafil
Bayer, (makers of Levitra) was given an OBE in 1959 and knighted in 2000.
I have had this problem twice. The first time was after I had a crash in 1962 and was in a coma for four weeks.
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Men worry that admitting they have the problem will reflect on their masculinity, but it has nothing to do with masculinity Sir Stirling Moss
|
I had a very toleranzentwicklung tadalafil
nurse and I turned to her and said, ‘I would love to do something about this but I can’t’.
Talking to her about it helped me through it.
The second time was when my prostate was taken out when I had cancer at 70. They cut it out and said I might have a problem with an erection.
My wife, Susie, and I are very close though and we fought the problem together.
HOW DID YOU GET DIAGNOSED?
I was diagnosed in a clinic in America, the Mayo Clinic, when I went for a complete check-up.
They found I had prostate cancer.
They took 12 tissue samples and four of them were cancerous.
I said I wanted the cancer out. They gave me three options, but I said I just wanted an operation and I wanted it straight away.
I think if you have cancer and they can cut it out then do it.
I just felt ‘lets get rid of it’.
My prostate was removed. Then I just took it easy.
As for the erectile dysfunction when I got that far ahead, because I did not realise straight away that there was a problem, I said to the doctor that I had a problem and he told me the options.
The impotence drug Viagra did not help me and I found an alternative called Cialis did not have very quick results, but a drug called Levitra suited my lifestyle. I took it and within 15 minutes I could be ‘in action’.
If you take one of these drugs you do not get an erection immediately.
When I was in hospital getting treated for the prostate cancer I felt knocked out - it took quite a lot out of me.
This might have had something to do with the fact I had just turned 70 when I found I had cancer.
With the erectile dysfunction I felt frustrated when the treatment did not work and then elated when it did.
When you are with a person you know so well and are close to you can really feel the urge (for sex) and if you have erectile dysfunction you can not do anything about it.
You can feel really amorous and really horny but if you don’t get an erection your partner will not know anything about how you are feeling.
It is amazing how many people suffer from it. I think the government should give more funding to addressing this problem.
The biggest problem is that men will not come forward. Men worry that admitting they have the problem will reflect on their masculinity, but it has nothing to do with masculinity.
One in three men suffer from this and if they have got this problem they should go to their doctor and if they have got a partner they should go with them to see the doctor. It should be a shared problem.
Now I just feel that is a bit annoying that I have to take a pill to ‘get it up’.
It is much more exciting for it to happen naturally, which is a lovely thing.
The message to anybody is go and see the doctor - they can help and do help.
If you have a partner take them with you. You have got to share it.
You can’t think it will just get better. There are a lot of things that could be the cause - things like diabetes you should get it checked out.
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By sheer coincidence my medical issues started as soon as I landed in the US four years ago. Only 48 hours after getting off the plane in Washington I was seized by numbing pain in my upper jaw and rushed to a smart dental clinic near the White House. I pointed to a throbbing molar and was puzzled to find the unusually monosyllabic nurse taking an X-ray of every single tooth in my mouth with quiet and unflinching determination. She returned half an hour later with the maestro of the clinic who pinned 36 or so stamp sized X-rays on a back-lit board as if they were part of an avant-garde art project and then gave a PowerPoint presentation entitled something like “My vision for your mouth”. “What about the tooth that hurts?” I asked innocently. “Thas juss the beginning,” said Dr Harrison, a southern gent with a pencil-thin moustache arching over a blindingly white smile. “We are gonna work together for three years to get everything in perfect order! An I promise, I won’t have to see ya more than once a month.”
When the doctor had exited in a swoosh of fluttering white to “work with” the next patient, the nurse leant over as if in deep confidence and added: “You are SOOO lucky to be working with Dr Harrison! He is the beeeast!”, making “best” sound like “beast”. I never returned after my root canal operation. I chose to become a dental fugitive, hounded every six weeks by increasingly urgent letters reminding me of the doctor’s vision and my empty promises. I am certain that my mouth is on a blacklist somewhere. Flatulent joints Two months later the next chapter of bodily woes was opened. One day, out of the blue, without warning and for no apparent reason, my neck felt as if I had survived a garrotting. I ventured into the hitherto unknown world of chiropractors.
Dr Schweinstein X-rayed everything above my shoulders and explained to me that - among other things - I had too much gas in my joints, which is why I would soon hear a flatulent noise as he took my neck into a half nelson. As I contemplated the notion of farting joints, the chiropractor’s fleshy hands fastened around my head, yanking it left and then right as if I was an extra in some martial arts movie. I heard the advertised noise and felt instantly better as the pain seeped away. “Thank you, Dr Schweinstein,” I said with genuine relief and admiration for the healing profession. “That will be it then?” I added for good measure, heading for the door. The doctor fixed me with watery blue eyes. “Actually,” he intoned with a flat, yet citrate sildenafil ups voice, “this is just the prologue, you might say. What I have in mind for you is a two-year programme… a standard course of chiro-therapy to get your neck back in shape. The good news is: shouldn’t need you here more than once a week! Your insurance should cover some, if not most of it.” The cost of this healing process to the uninsured would have been $150 a week. I wondered how the estimated 50m Americans who have no private medical insurance cope. They don’t, of course. But they weren’t on my mind at this stage. I was planning another getaway. A fugitive from medicine… twice over. Midlife crisis Four months later I was reading the New York Times and my then sale tadalafil “Like what?” “Like that… so far!” he said and stretched his little arms straight out.
I hadn’t even noticed how my reading arm had got longer and longer.
So my eyes were next. At least the optician was a “walk-in”. The verdict: long sighted. “Why?” I asked the optician, whose name escapes me. “I have always had perfect vision!” His nose crinkled and I knew I should have kept my mouth shut. No optician believes in perfect vision. It’s presumptuous and it’s not good for business. “How old are you?” he asked. “Forty-one,” I replied. “Ahhhhh,” he said in a voice oozing pity, terapia tadalafil and wisdom all coated in glee. “It’s the age.” And with those three words my midlife crisis started. The healthcare industry had officially declared me fair game, easy prey, a rich seam of never-ending profits.
I left the opticians and stumbled, diminished, into the glare of a Washington summer’s day. I walked down the road fingering my new glasses - frames so sleek, lenses so petite they were almost invisible - almost - when I felt my Blackberry buzz to life in my trouser pocket. I put on my new specs clumsily, half enjoying this pompous new prop, and allowed them to slide professorially to the tip of my nose. I glanced down at the tiny screen. It was a joy to see so clearly. An e-mail flashed up from someone called Kevin. I assumed it was work and clicked to open. “Need Viagra, Cialis, Levitra?” Kevin asked. “We can help! You can perform!” It wasn’t the Kevin I thought it was. Metatarsal hell I had hit rock-bottom. What could possibly be next? A few months later I got the answer: my feet.
I have always had feet so wide they defied even the most comfy Hush Puppies. To me, Buy cialis generic online
The pain was beginning to make me hobble and I was about to learn a new word: podiatry.
My podiatrist, a tower of a man who wears cause of erectile dysfunction “No surgery, yet, Matt. Foot surgery is a serious business… we’ll give you some orthotics first.” These specially moulded soles were the most expensive shoes I have ever bought and they didn’t work. Six months later the pain was so bad that I had to go under the knife. I would like to say that I have joined the hallowed order of the broken metatarsal, just in time for the World Cup. Rooney, Beckham, Owen, Frei… even if I was nursing MY metatarsal on the sofa watching them test theirs on the pitch. But unfortunately I shared my pain with the other Beckham, not David, Victoria. And it wasn’t the metatarsal per se… it was metatarsal-related. I am talking about an excrescence of the bone resulting in a serious realignment of the toes. I am talking about a… bunion. Posh Spice has one, a whopper that sticks out of her golden lace thong sandals like a raw pink golf ball. And I have two. One on each foot. Hobbling hordes “Bunion?” Isn’t that what women get for wearing the wrong shoes?” a friend asked. True. About 50% of American women get bunions, a statistic that didn’t make me feel any better. I owe mine to my mother. Yes, they are hereditary and no, I have never worn stilettos. “Bunion?” I asked the doctor. “Is there no fancier word? Something in Latin perhaps. Something complicated, more interesting?” “Well, bunion is the ancient Greek word for turnip. Does that help?” the doctor with the orange clogs asked. (*) No, it didn’t. The worst thing is that the surgery necessary to remove a “turnip” is long, complicated, painful and could end in failure. It involves hobbling around for eight weeks with a surgical boot that could have been invented by a workshop of medieval torturers on attachment to the Ministry of Funny Walks. I hit my low point last week. I was waiting in the surgery for my post operation check-up. I was surrounded by middle-aged women wearing the same boot. My fellow patients. The hobbling regiment of hop-alongs. A lady with a magenta rinse turned to me and said: “Honey, I feel so sorry for you. You are the wrong age and the wrong gender to have a bunionectomy!” She recommended I check out an internet talk show called Life Beyond Bunions. I didn’t know whether to feel flattered or flattened. *bunion: medical condition known as hallux valgus. Origin early 18th century, unknown origin, perhaps Old French buignon, from buigne, bump on the head (Oxford English Dictionary)
Send us your comments on this week’s Washington Diary
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The Eli Lilly site in Basingstoke has 445 employees and 111 generic cialis tadalafil price comparison
.
Eli Lilly said about 100 people could be eligible for early retirement, some will be offered redeployment but about 300 workers will be made redundant.
The company said the closure is subject to consultation with employees. Andrew Hotchkiss, managing director, said the cuts were caused by “over-capacity”.
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Proposing this site closure has been extremely difficult Andrew Hotchkiss
managing director |
The firm currently manufactures medicines which include Zyprexa, a treatment for severe mental illness and Cialis, a treatment for erectile tadalafil guenstig
.
The company said the closure plans would not have any impact on patients using the medicines.
Mr Hotchkiss said: “Proposing this site closure has been extremely difficult as we are reluctant to lose the highly-skilled, highly-motivated people who work at the site.
“The announcement today is based on the fact that there is over-capacity in Lilly’s dry product tadalafil online
network.
“We have conducted an analysis of our requirements in the dry product area, and whilst these medicines remain important for Lilly, sales forecasts over the next decade indicate that we have too much capacity both now and in the long-term.”
Local MP Maria Miller said she was concerned at the n tadalafil
for the wider manufacturing base in Basingstoke.
The town is home to a considerable number of hi-tech manufacturing industries and Mrs Miller said she was anxious that other firms did not follow Eli Lilly’s lead.
The company has a research facility in Windlesham, Surrey, and a viagra vs levitra
manufacturing facility at Speke on Merseyside.
treatment for impotency, a company has announced.
It is being developed by Futura Medical in collaboration with pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline.
The treatment, called MED2002, is expected to go into clinical trials at the end of 2006.
But the Sexual Dysfunction Association said it is important to await the outcome of these trials to see how effective the product really is.
MED2002, is based on a compound called glyceryl trinitrate (GTN), which has been used to treat angina for the last 40 years. GTN is known to cause dilation of the arteries and increased blood flow.
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Any kind of treatment needs to go through a process to find if it is effective or it there are side effects Sexual Dysfunction Association
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James Barder, chief executive of Futura Medical, said MED2002 had performed well in early in vitro trials.
The company will now be looking to recruit about 1,500 men to take part in three more clinical studies.
Mr Barder said: “We expect to see this on the market in 2009.”
Physical causes
Mr Barder said the treatment would be cialis soft tab
because GTN “is a well known compound and its side-effect profile is well tadalafil soft
“.
But the Sexual Dysfunction Association said it was important to await the outcome of the trials.
A spokesperson said: “The more treatment available the better it will be for any sufferers of erectile dysfunction.
“But obviously any kind of treatment needs to go through a process to find if it is effective or it there are side effects.
“And only after a careful evaluation will we be able to say whether this is a great tool or not.”
Erectile dysfunction is thought to affect about one in every 10 men in the UK.
About 70% of cases are believed to have physical causes, and 30% are because of psychological factors.
There are currently three oral drugs licensed for the treatment in the UK of erectile dysfunction: Cialis, Levitra and Viagra.
| A pharmaceutical company has confirmed it will close its Canada cialis generic erectile dysfunction drugs plant.
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See related site about Digg - eDmeds.
| Brazilian and US scientists are looking into using spider venom as a possible treatment for male impotence.
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| US scientists say they are closer to creating a gene therapy treatment for erectile dysfunction.
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How do yo think, is it true about eDmeds on digg.com?
| Impotency drugs such as Viagra and Cialis may be associated with increased risk of damage to the optic nerve in some men, research suggests.
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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 advised to return them to pharmacies.
Patients with concerns are advised to consult their GP or phone Lilly UK, which makes Cialis, on 0800 085 3847.
“Patients who are in possession of this counterfeit drug should return it cialis generic viagra
,” said Professor Kent Woods, chief executive of the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).
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If patients think that they have taken the product and are concerned about any side effects they should consult their doctor
Professor Kent Woods,
MHRA |
“Whilst initial tests show that the product does not pose an immediate risk to patients, the quality of this product cannot be guaranteed.
“If patients think that they have taken the product and are concerned about any side effects they should consult their doctor.”
The counterfeit tablets are understood to have found their way into some pharmacies. Investigations are underway to try to find out how this happened.
Patient complaint
Lilly UK discovered the fake drugs after a patient generic cialis tadalafil about a crumbling tablet.
The company investigated and found that the tablet was counterfeit. It then contacted the MHRA.
“We want to emphasise that genuine Cialis is not affected by this matter,” it said in a statement.
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.
“This incident highlights the need for the greatest vigilance and scrutiny, especially when medicines are introduced into the system other than from their original erectile dysfunction drugs
s,” said Dr Richard Barker, director general of the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry.
“The best protection against counterfeiting is to ensure that the products bought are those supplied by the authentic manufacturer.
“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.”
are receiving medication that they can trust absolutely.”
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