Archive for the 'Levitra' Category

News - Health - Celebrity Health - Sir Stirling Moss

Tuesday, May 27th, 2008

In a series on celebrities and their health, the BBC News website talks to racing driver Sir Stirling Moss about his erectile dysfunction.

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 manaufacturers Bayer, (makers of Levitra) was given an OBE in 1959 and knighted in 2000.

HOW DID YOU FIRST REALISE SOMETHING WAS WRONG?

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.


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 attractive 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.

WHAT WAS YOUR REACTION TO THE DIAGNOSIS?

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’.

WHAT WAS YOUR TREATMENT?

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 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 .

HOW DID YOU FEEL DURING TREATMENT?

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 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.

HOW DO YOU FEEL NOW?

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.

WHAT IS YOUR MESSAGE TO OTHER PEOPLE WITH THE SAME CONDITION?

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.

And some information of .

News - Business - Viagra rival approved in US

Sunday, May 25th, 2008


The United States Government has approved the sale of a new drug expected to raise the stakes in the male impotence market.

Levitra, the first market rival to the hugely profitable Viagra, is being by the German firm, Bayer AG, and marketed by the British firm GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) as an alternative oral therapy for erectile .

Since its appearance in 1998, sales of Pfizer’s Viagra have risen to nearly $2bn a year.

Both pills work in the same manner and doctors warn that both can have serious side effects, especially for men with heart problems.

A third anti-impotence pill, Cialis, is expected to reach the US market later this year.

The US Food and Drug (FDA) approved Levitra, an orange pill compared to Viagra’s blue, based on studies showing that men were on average five times more likely to achieve an erection suitable for intercourse when taking the pill compared with those given a dummy medicine.

reported that studies of several thousand men showed that Viagra helped more than 70% improve their
erections.

As well as the warnings to men with heart conditions, the FDA said Levitra was not for patients with who had suffered a recent heart attack or stroke who have very low blood pressure or uncontrolled high blood pressure.

For otherwise healthy men, Levitra’s main side effects
were headache, flushing and a stuffy nose and sometimes dizziness.

Lawson Macartney, head of strategic management of GlaxoSmithKline’s cardiovascular, metabolic and urology drugs, said: “We know, from considerable market research, that the
market is ready for new options”.

GSK expects Levitra to be available in September.

Read more about .

EDrugstore Online Pharmacy Launches New Internet Drugstore

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

eDrugstore, a leading U.S. online pharmacy serving the U.S. and Canada, has just redesigned and enhanced their Internet drug store to significantly improve navigation, content, and design. With a totally fresh appearance and format, eDrugstore.net provides drugstore discounts and coupons, health , and drug news for online shoppers.

ADVERTISEMENT

Phoenix, AZ (PRWEB) January 31, 2008 — eDrugstore announces the launch of its new online pharmacy serving North America. The Internet drugstore eDrugstore.net has redesigned and enhanced their website to give customers an easier way to buy prescription drugs online. The newly designed web site makes it easier for anyone interested in learning more about or ordering s such Viagra, Cialis, Tramadol, Chantix, and Valtrex. Every product has an information page, which can be easily seen by selecting the brand name on the navigation menu.

“We wanted to highlight our drug prices, secure ordering process, and complete protection of our customers' privacy by displaying our Product Guarantee Policy and our strict No Spam Policy,” states Drew Hayes, chief operating officer of eDrugstore.

“I've used another online pharmacy to buy Viagra online before, only to get some phony baloney generic pills instead,” says eDrugstore customer, Arne Jacobsen. “When I received my order from eDrugstore, I was glad to find that it was authentic Viagra. I would recommend that you promote the fact that you only carry genuine FDA approved medications to better notify your other customers.”

The online pharmacy eDrugstore has received hundreds of emails such as this from its customers, which the company used to help shape their site redesign. eDrugstore assures customers they will receive FDA approved medications by contracting with only licensed American physicians and licensed American pharmacies, and by purchasing brand name products directly from the U.S. manufacturers.

eDrugstore is a US based online pharmacy that has been serving patients throughout North America for more than five years. As of January 2008, the Internet drugstore has delivered prescription savings to over 500,000 satisfied customers in the U.S. and Canada. For more information on the online pharmacy or to buy prescription drugs online, such as Viagra, Cialis, Tramadol, Valtrex and Zyban, visit http://eDrugstore.net

About eDrugstore:
Since 2002, eDrugstore has operated an online pharmacy where consumers can purchase leading lifestyle medications, such as Viagra, Cialis, Levitra, Propecia, and Chantix. Customers are prompted to fill out a secure medical questionnaire on the website which is submitted to a physician in the United States who may then issue a prescription if they determine the medication requested is a suitable treatment. To ensure the customer's package is delivered accurately and on time, their medication is shipped by UPS from a U.S. licensed pharmacy. The customer service support team at eDrugstore is available to handle calls 7:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. Monday thru Saturday.

###

eDrugstore
Bob Forsythe
(8 8) 619-8472
E-mail Information

Trackback URL: http://prweb.com/pingpr.php/TWFnbi1NYWduLVN1bW0tQ291cC1aZXRhLVplcm8=

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News - Health - Celebrity Health - Sir Stirling Moss

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

In a series on celebrities and their health, the BBC News website talks to racing driver Sir Stirling Moss about his erectile dysfunction.

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 Bayer, (makers of Levitra) was given an OBE in 1959 and knighted in 2000.

HOW DID YOU FIRST REALISE SOMETHING WAS WRONG?

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.


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 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.

WHAT WAS YOUR REACTION TO THE ?

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’.

WHAT WAS YOUR ?

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.

HOW DID YOU FEEL DURING TREATMENT?

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 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.

HOW DO YOU FEEL NOW?

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.

WHAT IS YOUR MESSAGE TO OTHER PEOPLE WITH THE SAME CONDITION?

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.

News - Business - Viagra rival approved in US

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008
The United States Government has approved the sale of a new drug expected to raise the stakes in the male impotence market.

Levitra, the first market rival to the hugely profitable Viagra, is being manufactured by the German firm, Bayer AG, and marketed by the British firm GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) as an alternative oral therapy for erectile dysfunction.

Since its appearance in 1998, sales of Pfizer’s Viagra have risen to nearly $2bn a year.

Both pills work in the same manner and doctors warn that both can have serious side effects, especially for men with heart problems.

A third anti-impotence pill, Cialis, is expected to reach the US market later this year.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Levitra, an orange pill compared to Viagra’s blue, based on studies showing that men were on average five times more likely to achieve an erection suitable for intercourse when taking the pill compared with those given a dummy medicine.

Researchers reported that studies of several thousand men showed that Viagra helped more than 70% improve their
erections.

As well as the warnings to men with heart , the FDA said Levitra was not for patients with who had suffered a recent heart attack or stroke who have very low blood pressure or high blood pressure.

For otherwise healthy men, Levitra’s main side effects
were headache, flushing and a stuffy nose and sometimes dizziness.

Lawson Macartney, head of strategic management of GlaxoSmithKline’s , metabolic and urology drugs, said: “We know, from market research, that the
market is ready for new options”.

GSK expects Levitra to be available in September.

Read another articles about .

News - Health - Celebrity Health - Sir Stirling Moss

Tuesday, May 20th, 2008

In a series on and their health, the BBC News website talks to racing driver Sir Stirling Moss about his erectile dysfunction.

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 manaufacturers Bayer, (makers of Levitra) was given an OBE in 1959 and knighted in 2000.

HOW DID YOU FIRST REALISE SOMETHING WAS WRONG?

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.


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 attractive 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.

WHAT WAS YOUR REACTION TO THE DIAGNOSIS?

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’.

WHAT WAS YOUR TREATMENT?

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 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 .

HOW DID YOU FEEL DURING TREATMENT?

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.

HOW DO YOU FEEL NOW?

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.

WHAT IS YOUR MESSAGE TO OTHER PEOPLE WITH THE SAME CONDITION?

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.

Read another articles about .

News - Business - Viagra rival approved in US

Monday, May 19th, 2008

The United States Government has approved the sale of a new drug expected to raise the stakes in the male impotence market.

Levitra, the first market rival to the hugely profitable Viagra, is being by the German firm, Bayer AG, and marketed by the British firm GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) as an alternative oral therapy for erectile .

Since its appearance in 1998, sales of Pfizer’s Viagra have risen to nearly $2bn a year.

Both pills work in the same manner and doctors warn that both can have serious side effects, especially for men with heart problems.

A third pill, Cialis, is expected to reach the US market later this year.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Levitra, an orange pill compared to Viagra’s blue, based on studies showing that men were on average five times more likely to achieve an erection suitable for intercourse when taking the pill compared with those given a dummy medicine.

Researchers reported that studies of several thousand men showed that Viagra helped more than 70% improve their
erections.

As well as the warnings to men with heart conditions, the FDA said Levitra was not for patients with who had suffered a recent heart attack or stroke who have very low blood pressure or uncontrolled high blood pressure.

For otherwise healthy men, Levitra’s main side effects
were headache, flushing and a stuffy nose and sometimes dizziness.

Lawson Macartney, head of strategic management of GlaxoSmithKline’s , metabolic and urology drugs, said: “We know, from considerable market research, that the
market is ready for new options”.

GSK expects Levitra to be available in September.

Read another articles about .

News - Health - Celebrity Health - Sir Stirling Moss

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

In a series on celebrities and their health, the BBC News website talks to racing driver Sir Stirling Moss about his erectile .

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 to race historic cars.

Sir Stirling, a spokesman for SortED in 10, the education campaign sponsored by drug’s manaufacturers Bayer, (makers of Levitra) was given an OBE in 1959 and knighted in 2000.

HOW DID YOU FIRST REALISE SOMETHING WAS WRONG?

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.


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 attractive 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.

WHAT WAS YOUR REACTION TO THE DIAGNOSIS?

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’.

WHAT WAS YOUR ?

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.

HOW DID YOU FEEL DURING TREATMENT?

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 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 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.

HOW DO YOU FEEL NOW?

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.

WHAT IS YOUR MESSAGE TO OTHER PEOPLE WITH THE SAME CONDITION?

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.

, and more another.

News - Business - Viagra rival approved in US

Saturday, May 17th, 2008
The United States Government has approved the sale of a new drug expected to raise the stakes in the male impotence market.

Levitra, the first market rival to the hugely profitable Viagra, is being by the German firm, Bayer AG, and marketed by the British firm (GSK) as an alternative oral therapy for erectile dysfunction.

Since its appearance in 1998, sales of Pfizer’s Viagra have risen to nearly $2bn a year.

Both pills work in the same manner and doctors warn that both can have serious side effects, especially for men with heart problems.

A third anti-impotence pill, Cialis, is expected to reach the US market later this year.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved Levitra, an orange pill compared to Viagra’s blue, based on studies showing that men were on average five times more likely to achieve an erection suitable for intercourse when taking the pill compared with those given a dummy medicine.

reported that studies of several thousand men showed that Viagra helped more than 70% improve their
erections.

As well as the warnings to men with heart conditions, the FDA said Levitra was not for patients with who had suffered a recent heart attack or stroke who have very low blood pressure or high blood pressure.

For otherwise healthy men, Levitra’s main side effects
were headache, flushing and a stuffy nose and sometimes dizziness.

Lawson Macartney, head of strategic management of GlaxoSmithKline’s , metabolic and urology drugs, said: “We know, from considerable market research, that the
market is ready for new options”.

GSK expects Levitra to be available in September.

How do yo think, is it true about ?

News - Health - Celebrity Health - Sir Stirling Moss

Thursday, May 15th, 2008


In a series on celebrities and their health, the BBC News website talks to racing driver Sir Stirling Moss about his erectile dysfunction.

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 manaufacturers Bayer, (makers of Levitra) was given an OBE in 1959 and knighted in 2000.

HOW DID YOU FIRST REALISE SOMETHING WAS WRONG?

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.


Men worry that admitting they have the problem will reflect on their , but it has nothing to do with masculinity
Sir Stirling Moss

I had a very attractive 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.

WHAT WAS YOUR REACTION TO THE ?

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’.

WHAT WAS YOUR TREATMENT?

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 .

HOW DID YOU FEEL DURING TREATMENT?

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.

HOW DO YOU FEEL NOW?

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.

WHAT IS YOUR MESSAGE TO OTHER PEOPLE WITH THE SAME CONDITION?

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.

How do yo think, is it true about ?