Men's Health - Viagra

English  

Shopping Cart
0 items
Categories
Erection Packs

Viagra Soft + Cialis Soft
Cardizem
  10 pills x 20mg
Cardizem
  10 pills x 100mg

$99.95


Penis Growth Pack
Cardizem
  1 month supply x 1tube
Cardizem
  1 month supply x 1bottle

$179.95


Viagra + Cialis + Levitra
Cardizem
  10 pills x 20mg
Cardizem
  10 pills x 100mg
Cardizem
  10 pills x 20mg

$119.99


Viagra + Cialis
Cardizem
  10 pills x 100mg
Cardizem
  10 pills x 20mg

$69.99

Pharmacy News

Post-Surgery Exercise Benefits Lung Cancer Patients
Patients who have undergone surgical procedures for the removal of lung cancer can tolerate and benefit from exercise regimens started just a month after surgery, according to a new study led by researchers at the Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center.

AARP Commends Lawmakers For Working To Safeguard Nursing Home Residents, USA
AARP issued a statement following today's House Energy and Commerce Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee hearing on nursing home safeguards. The statement, from AARP Legislative Policy Director David Certner, follows: "We thank the subcommittee for its work to protect the 1.5 million older Americans who rely on nursing homes for their care.

Which Best Predicts Prostate Cancer Risk? Race, Family History Or Baseline PSA
African-American men with family histories of prostate cancer could benefit from a baseline prostate-specific antigen (PSA) reading to determine their probability of developing the disease.

Americans Who Are Not Taking Advantage Of Lower- Cost Generic Prescriptions Are Wasting Their Hard-earned Money - AARP
According to a new report released by AARP, manufacturer prices of 185 widely used generic drugs in Medicare Part D decreased by an average of 9.6 percent in 2007. A report from AARP earlier this year showed that manufacturer prices of 220 of the most commonly used brand-name drugs by Part D enrollees increased by more than seven percent during the same period.

In Fight Against Deadly Brain Tumors Common Virus May Serve As Target For Vaccine
By targeting a common virus, doctors may be able to extend the lives of patients diagnosed with the most prevalent and deadly type of brain tumor, according to a study led by researchers in Duke's Preston Robert Tisch Brain Tumor Center.

Latest Research On GI Health Presented At DDW 2008
Colonoscopy: New developments in polyp detection, colonoscopy preparation and sedation techniques that will increase the effectiveness of colonoscopy and ease patient concerns about the procedure will be presented. Research advances in sedation include computer-assisted sedation systems and the new evidence supporting the administration of propofol by GI physicians.

Chemotherapy Might Help Cancer Vaccines Work
Chemotherapy given in conjunction with cancer vaccines may boost the immune system's response, potentially improving the effectiveness of this promising type of cancer therapy, according to a study by researchers in the Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center.

New Study Reports That Ablative Therapy With HALO360 Device Effectively Treats Highest-Risk Category Of Barrett's Esophagus
BARRX Medical, Inc., the global technology leader for treating precancerous conditions of the digestive tract, announced that 90.2 percent of the patients in a multi-center U.S. study were free of the highest-risk of Barrett's esophagus after having a non-surgical, endoscopic treatment using the HALO360 ablation system. Barrett's esophagus afflicts more than three million U.S.

Potential Vulnerabilities Discovered In HIV Infection
A new study reveals the genetic identity of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the version responsible for sexual transmission, in unprecedented detail.The finding provides important clues in the ongoing search for an effective HIV/AIDS vaccine, said researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).

Link Found Between Obesity, Unhealthy Lifestyles And More Complex Urinary Problems
People who are obese and lead unhealthy lifestyles are more likely to suffer from a larger number of urinary problems, according to a population-based study of more than 5,000 men and women published in the May issue of the UK-based urology journal BJU International. Researchers hope the results will help clinicians to understand why problems occur and how they can be managed more effectively.

Back To Basics: Simple Model Cell Is Key To Understanding Cell Complexity
A team of Penn State researchers has developed a simple artificial cell with which to investigate the organization and function of two of the most basic cell components: the cell membrane and the cytoplasm--the gelatinous fluid that surrounds the structures in living cells.

Under-2s Still Being Dosed With Cough Medicine Despite The Warnings
More than 40 per cent of parents have used cough medicine for children younger than two - even though it is not recommended, nor proven effective for children in this age group, an Australia-first study has found.

Lautenberg Measure To Keep New Jersey Children Covered By Health Insurance Passes Key Senate Committee, USA
A measure introduced by U.S. Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg (D-NJ) designed to make sure 8,000 New Jersey children can have access to health care passed a key Senate committee yesterday. The Lautenberg language is meant to counteract the Bush Administration's so-called "August 17" directive. The measure has the support of Senator Robert Menendez (D-NJ).

Steris Corporation Introduces Its Newest High-Performance Surgical Instrument Cleaning Formulation
STERIS Corporation has launched a versatile addition to its high-performance Prolystica line of instrument cleaning formulations. Prolystica Enzymatic Presoak and Cleaner is a premium 2-times concentrated dual-protease cleaner that provides exceptional, fast cleaning performance while still protecting expensive surgical instruments, devices and automated washers.

Risk Of Death Persists In Heart Patients With Acute Kidney Injury
Acute kidney injury (AKI), a common complication of cardiac surgery during hospitalization, is linked to increased and prolonged risk of death in heart attack patients who have been discharged from the hospital, according to a study published in Archives of Internal Medicine by Yale School of Medicine researchers.Led by Chirag Parikh, M.D.

Nurse Addresses Lymphedema In Breast Cancer Patients And Survivors
A poster session presented by The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center at the Oncology Nurses Society 33rd Annual Congress, found that early nursing intervention and implementation of effective strategies can lead to a decrease in the incidence of lymphedema, better management of chronic lymphedema and improved quality of life in breast cancer patients.

Edward Kennedy Had Seizure, Not Stroke
Sen. Edward Kennedy was transferred by helicopter from a local hospital in Cape Cod to Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, after reportedly suffering a seizure. Reports indicate he may have experienced two seizures (Boston Globe). According to a hospital media release, Kennedy is "resting comfortably". The second seizure has not been confirmed by doctors or Kennedy's office.

Childhood Obesity 'levelling Off' In France
France may be the first country in the EU to see signs of a levelling off in the national prevalence of childhood obesity, according to the results of two new surveys.

Sitting Position Can Influence Risk Of Whiplash
Women run a three times greater risk than men of incurring a debilitating injury in a rear-end collision. This is partly due to differences between the sexes regarding sitting position. This has been shown by Bertil Jonsson at Umea University in Sweden.

New Research Findings Enable More Reliable Prognoses For Breast Cancer
Researchers at Umea University in Sweden have shown that the length of telomeres in blood cells in newly diagnosed breast cancer patients is tied to survival rates. The study, published in the journal Cancer Research, was carried out by a research team headed by Professor Goran Roos at the Department of Medical Bioscience, Pathology.

3,000 Evacuated After Train Chemical Spill, Louisiana, USA
Over three thousand people were evacuated after a train derailed in Lafayette, Louisiana, releasing approximately 8,000 to 10,000 gallons of hydrochloric acid - a toxic chemical. Authorities say two of the railroad cars leaked hydrochloric acid. Eye-witnesses say the spill formed a yellowish pool. Everybody who lived within a mile of the derailment have been taken to a school outside the city.

From A Set Of Formulas To Visible Changes In Liver Cancer
With systems biology methods, CancerSys investigates molecular and cell biological processes in the formation of tumors in the liverSystems Biology is a young field with the overall aim of creating a holistic picture of dynamic life processes with regard to all levels from the genome via the prot

Computational Biologists Unveil New Tool To Understand Evolution Of Multi-Domain Genes
Carnegie Mellon scientists have discovered critical flaws in the standard method used to analyze gene evolution. Standard methods fail when applied to genes that encode multi-domain proteins, an important class of proteins crucial to human health.Computational biologist Dannie Durand and colleagues have for the first time tackled the dilemma of how to study the ancestry of multi-domain genes.

The Starting Point Of Sun-Induced Skin Cancer Disovered By U Of Minnesota Researcher
According to a new study from the University of Minnesota, the earliest event in the development of sun-induced skin cancer may have been identified. The researchers found that the point of entry for skin cancer in response to sun exposure is in receptor molecules, molecular "hooks" on the outer surface of cells that also pull cannabinoid compounds found in marijuana out of the bloodstream.

Behaving Violently At School: Adolescents' Values Can Serve As A Buffer
Researchers in Israel have found that teenagers' values helped determine whether or not they engaged in violent behavior at school, especially in schools where violence was common.The researchers are from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The study is published in the May/June 2008 issue of the journal Child Development.

2009 Annual Scientific Sessions Of The Society For Cardiovascular Angiography And Interventions To Be Held In Las Vegas
The Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions (SCAI)has announced that it will hold its 2009 Annual Scientific Sessions May 6-9, 2009, at Caesar's Palace, Las Vegas. The focused, collegial interventional cardiology meeting will move to a late February or early March meeting time beginning in 2010.

25 Years Of HIV: Dr. Anthony Fauci Reflects
On the 25th anniversary of the first scientific article linking a retrovirus to AIDS, Anthony S. Fauci, M.D., director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health, reflects in an essay in Nature on his experience treating and studying HIV/AIDS for the past quarter century.

New Drug Reduces One Cause Of Vision Loss
In the industrialized world, most diseases that cause vision loss do so by altering the permeability of the blood vessels in the retina of the eye such that fluid accumulates in the retina impairing eyesight.

Immune Cells Kill Foes By Disrupting Mitochondria 2 Ways
When killer T cells of the immune system encounter virus-infected or cancer cells, they unload a lethal mix of toxic proteins that trigger the target cells to self-destruct.

Uric Acid Stones May Indicate Arteriosclerotic Diseases
Patients with metabolic syndrome disorders, including diabetes and high cholesterol, may be more likely to develop uric-acid stones than other type of calculi, according to research presented at the 103rd Annual Scientific Meeting of the American Urological Association (AUA).

Unique Experience With Civilian Bladder Trauma In Baghdad
Al Yarmouk Teaching Hospital in Baghdad is one of Iraq's most well-known trauma centers; it is frequently mentioned in U.S. news reports from Baghdad. Fighting in Iraq has produced many civilian casualties causing doctors there to treat an unusually high proportion of civilian - as opposed to combatant - injuries.

Retired Firefighters Could Be At Increased Risk For Developing Bladder Cancer
A new study presented at the Annual Scientific Meeting of the American Urological Association (AUA) suggests that firefighters may be at an increased risk of developing transitional cell carcinoma (TCC, or bladder cancer) and should be considered for routine annual screening. Currently, no guidelines exist for regular TCC screening.

Maxi-K Gene Transfer May Prove To Be Safe And Effective Erectile Dysfunction Treatment
Maxi-K gene therapy may be a safe and effective future option for men whose erectile dysfunction (ED) is not treatable with oral therapy. Two studies presented at the 103rd Annual Scientific Meeting of the American Urological Association (AUA) may give hope to these individuals. Researchers present their findings to reporters in a special press conference on May 20, 2008 at 10 a.m.

Access To Urologists And Prostate Cancer Screenings Lead To Better Outcomes For Patients
Men with greater access to prostate cancer screenings and treatment have better outcomes from the disease, a new study shows. Urologist population density was directly related to increased numbers of screening programs and decreased mortality rates from the disease.

Compound Has Potential For New Class Of AIDS Drugs
Researchers have developed what they believe is the first new mechanism in nearly 20 years for inhibiting a common target used to treat all HIV patients, which could eventually lead to a new class of AIDS drugs.

Nanotechnology In Reverse Uses Cell To Calibrate Tools
Nanotechnology researchers at UC Davis have shown that they can use a red blood cell to calibrate a sensitive instrument, an atomic force microscope.

Monkey Studies Important For Brain Science
Studies with non-human primates have made major contributions to our understanding of the brain and will continue to be an important, if small, part of neuroscience research, according to a recent review published in the British medical journal, The Lancet.Authors John P.

Study Looks At Predictors Of Late Language Emergence In Toddlers
New research findings from the world's largest study on language emergence have revealed that one in four late talking toddlers continue to have language problems by age 7.

Funding For Development Of OSU Technologies
OSU's Technology Business Assessment Group will fund four faculty research projects for spring 2008. The group identified these one-year projects from a number of excellent proposals submitted in response to a solicitation earlier this spring. Funding for the program is administered by the OSU Office of Intellectual Property Management, and is generated by royalties from OSU-licensed technologies.

Australian Metabolic Syndrome Research Project Receives Grant From International Diabetes Federation
The International Diabetes Federation (IDF) BRIDGES translational research grant program will fund STOP Diabetes, a project to be implemented and studied in Australia. The STOP project is designed to reduce the risk for type 2 diabetes in women by encouraging healthy behaviours.

'Dirt-Powered' Microbial Fuel Cells Developed By Undergraduates To Light Africa
A team composed of Harvard students and alumni was among the winners of the World Bank's Lighting Africa 2008 Development Marketplace competition, held in Accra, Ghana. The innovation, microbial fuel cell-based lighting systems suitable for Sub-Saharan Africa, netted the group a $200,000 prize.

Ning Wong Of Fox Chase Cancer Center Receives ASCO Cancer Foundation Career Development Award
The American Society of Clinical Oncology Cancer Foundation has selected Yu-Ning Wong, M.D., M.S.C.E., of Fox Chase Cancer Center, as one of 13 clinicians to receive a 2008 Career Development Award. Career Development Awards are presented to physicians in their second, third or fourth year as full-time faculty members in an academic setting.

New Formula Connects Optical Quality With Visual Acuity With Potential To Provide Automatic Eyeglasses Prescriptions
For the first time, a study combines measurements of abnormalities in the eye with models for assessing how well an individual can see, meaning it may be possible to program a machine to automatically produce prescriptions for corrective lenses.

Factors In Delaying Or Declining Total Knee Replacement Surgery
A study led by Dr. Ann F. Jacobson, associate professor in Kent State's College of Nursing, unveils the reasons why people may initially choose to postpone but ultimately undergo total knee replacement surgery and emphasizes the need for better patient education before and after the procedure.

World's Largest Conference On Evolution To Be Hosted By University Of Minnesota
University of Minnesota to host world's largest conference on evolution; author, columnist Olivia Judson headlines.More than 1,400 of the world's top experts on evolution will gather in Minnesota June 20 through 24 for "Evolution 2008," the world's largest annual gathering of evolutionary biologists.

Analysis: Control Reduces Cardiovascular Risk By 42%
Results of a new analysis of the Treating to New Targets (TNT) study show that intensive low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol-lowering in patients with stable coronary heart disease (CHD) whose systolic blood pressure was less than 140 mmHg reduced the risk of major cardiovascular events, includ

Prospective Study Of The Long-Term Effects Of Shock Wave Lithotripsy On Renal Function And Blood Pressure
UroToday.com - The debate regarding the long-term effects of SWL on patient hypertension and diabetes continues.These researchers from Egypt prospectively randomized 100 patients with a single, 2 cm or less renal stone and similar BMI's, treated with unilateral SWL on an electrohydraulic (Dornier MFL 5000) or an electromagnetic (Dornier Lithotripter S) lithotripter unit.

Robot-Assisted Laparoscopic Ureteroureterostomy: Description Of Technique
UroToday.com - This study out of Boston Children's by Passerotti, et al described the group's technique utilizing robotics for ureteroureterostomy in patients with mid ureteral obstructions. The group had 3 patients, 2 who were boys and 1 girl with their ages being 4.7, 9.6 and 14.3 years. These patients all had mid ureteral strictures and obstruction.

Bone Drug Could Help Prevent The Spread Of Breast Cancer
Maintaining bone density could be a key to decreasing the spread of cancer in women with locally advanced breast cancer, according to research at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.Bones are common sites for the spread, or metastasis, of breast cancer.

Disabling Mouse Enzyme Increases Fertility
Changing the sugars attached to a hormone produced in the pituitary gland increased fertility levels in mice nearly 50 percent, a research group at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis has found. The change appears to alter a reproductive "thermostat," unveiling part of an intricate regulatory system that may one day be used to enhance human fertility.

Only About 1 In 10 Adult Americans Are Health Literate
Just 12 percent of America's 228 million adults have the skills to manage their own health care proficiently, according to the latest News and Numbers from the Agency for Healthcare Research. These skills, known collectively as health literacy, describe people's person's ability to obtain and use health information to make appropriate health care decisions.

New Treatment Implications For Ovarian Cancer Unveiled
New research findings from a top clinical investigator at The Cancer Institute of New Jersey (CINJ) indicate the potential for more targeted treatment of ovarian cancer, which is expected to claim more than 15,000 lives nationwide this year, with 480 in New Jersey.

Fibroids Common, But Women Have Options
Small fibroids located just beneath the lining of the uterus (submucosal) are more likely to move to the endometrial cavity after uterine artery embolization (UAE) but usually don't cause major complications, according to a new study.The study included 49 patients with 140 fibroids who underwent an MRI examination before and after UAE. The study found that 39 of these were submucosal.

Scientist Unravels Deadly Pathogens
A scientist in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Virginia Health System has deciphered the metabolic properties of two dangerous pathogens discovering how they thrive and which genes, when knocked out, cause them to weaken. Jason Papin, Ph.D.

Suicide Prevention Group Delivers Much Needed Message To Pennsylvania's Elderly
This month, in recognition of National Mental Health Month and Older Pennsylvanians Month, Feeling Blue Suicide Prevention Council (SPC) will offer an important message to senior citizens through a public service announcement.

World AIDS Vaccine Day 2008
Twenty-five years since the discovery of HIV, the world has made considerable advances in addressing the AIDS pandemic. Scientists have learned a tremendous amount about HIV, perhaps more than any other pathogen, and have developed more drugs to treat AIDS than all other viral diseases combined. But this progress is not enough.

AIDS Action Urges Everyone To Help End The AIDS Epidemic By Being Part Of The Search For An HIV Vaccine
Twenty-six years into the AIDS epidemic, someone is newly infected with HIV every 13 minutes in the U.S.

Boston Scientific Announces FDA Approval Of New Heart Failure Lead
Boston Scientific Corporation (NYSE: BSX) announced U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of its ACUITY(R) Spiral left ventricular lead for use with cardiac resynchronization therapy defibrillators (CRT-D) and cardiac resynchronization therapy pacemakers (CRT-P), both of which treat heart failure.

Nexavar Significantly Improves Overall Survival By 47 Percent In Asia Pacific Liver Cancer Study
Bayer HealthCare Pharmaceuticals, Inc. and Onyx Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (Nasdaq: ONXX) announced that Nexavar(R) (sorafenib) tablets significantly improved overall survival by 47.3 percent (HR=0.68; p-value=0.014) in patients in the Asia-Pacific region with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), or primary liver cancer versus those receiving placebo.

First Electrophysical Recording Of Sleep In A Wild Animal
In the first experiment to record the electrophysiology of sleep in a wild animal, three-toed sloths carrying miniature electroencephalogram recorders slept 9.63 hours per day - 6 hours less than captive sloths did, reports an international team of researchers working on the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute's Barro Colorado Island in Panama.
Viagra
Drug nameViagra (Sildenafil)Drug UsesViagra is used to treat impotence (...See More)
Top » Catalog » Men's Health » Viagra

Viagra


Drug name

Viagra (Sildenafil)

Drug Uses

Viagra is used to treat impotence in men. It increases the body's ability to achieve and maintain an erection during sexual stimulation.

How Taken

Viagra should be taken as needed about 1 hour before sexual activity. However, Viagra can be taken anytime from 4 hours to 30 minutes before sexual activity.

Drug Class and Mechanism

Viagra is a phosphodiesterase inhibitor. It works by helping the blood flow into the penis to achieve and maintain an erection.

Missed Dose

Viagra is used as needed, so you are not likely to miss a dose. If you miss a dose of Viagra, take the missed dose as soon as you remember. If it is almost time for your next dose, skip the missed dose and take the medicine at the next regularly scheduled time. Do not take extra medicine to make up the missed dose.

Storage

Keep Viagra in its original container. Store at 25 degrees C (77 degrees F); excursions permitted to 15-30 degrees C (59-86 degrees F).

Warnings Precautions

Do not take Viagra if you are taking any nitrate-based drug, including nitroglycerin patches (Nitro-Dur, Transderm-Nitro), nitroglycerin ointment (Nitro-Bid, Nitrol), nitroglycerin pills (Nitro-Bid, Nitrostat), and isosorbide pills (Dilatrate-SR, Isordil, Sorbitrate). Combining Viagra with these drugs can cause a severe drop in blood pressure.

If you have heart problems severe enough to make sexual activity a danger, you should avoid using Viagra. Use it cautiously if you've had a heart attack, stroke, or life-threatening heart irregularities within the past 6 months. Be equally cautious if you have severe high or low blood pressure, heart failure, or unstable angina.

If you take Viagra and develop cardiac symptoms (for example, dizziness, nausea, and chest pain) during sexual activity, do not continue. Alert your doctor to the problem as soon as possible.

If you have a condition that might result in long-lasting erections, such as sickle cell anemia, multiple myeloma (a disease of the bone marrow), or leukemia, use Viagra with caution. Also use cautiously if you have a genital problem or deformity such as Peyronie's disease. If an erection lasts more than 4 hours, seek treatment immediately. Permanent damage and impotence could result.

If you have a bleeding disorder, a stomach ulcer, or the inherited eye condition known as retinitis pigmentosa, use Viagra with caution. Its safety under these circumstances has not yet been studied.


Possible Side Effects

If you experience any of the following serious side effects, stop taking Viagra and seek emergency medical attention or notify your doctor immediately:

  • an allergic reaction (difficulty breathing; closing of the throat; swelling of the lips, tongue, or face; or hives);
  • chest pain or an irregular heartbeat;
  • swelling of the ankles or legs;
  • shortness of breath;
  • prolonged or severe dizziness;
  • a prolonged (lasting longer than 4 hours) or painful erection; or
  • dizziness, nausea, or angina (pain, tightness, discomfort, numbness, or tingling in the chest, arms, neck, or jaw).
Other, less serious side effects may be more likely to occur. Continue to take Viagra and talk to your doctor if you experience
  • flushing;
  • mild dizziness;
  • headache;
  • nasal congestion;
  • diarrhea;
  • temporary blue tint in vision or other vision abnormalities; or
  • itching or a rash.
Side effects other than those listed here may also occur. Talk to your doctor about any side effect that seems unusual or that is especially bothersome.

More Information

If you are over 65 years of age, you may be more likely to experience side effects from Viagra. Your doctor may prescribe a lower dose of this medication.


$32.44



Available Options:
Package:
Current Reviews: 1
This product was added to our catalog on Thursday 17 April, 2008.
Reviews
 Current Reviews: 1  
AddViagra to del.icio AddViagra to Digg AddViagra to Technorati AddViagra to Furl AddViagra to Reddit AddViagra to Reddit
Customers who bought this product also purchased


Female Viagra

Female Viagra

Currently viewing:  Men's Health - Viagra