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Alcohol intake
& Smoking cigarettes decreases Men's Power
A recent study at the New England Research Institute
in Watertown, Massachusetts, found that impotence was
equally common among smokers and non-smokers in general.
However, among men with certain health problems, those
who smoked were much more likely to have potency problems.
For example, 56 percent of smokers with heart disease
were completely impotent compared with only 21 percent
of non-smokers with the disease.
Alcohol intake decreases the body's ability to produce
testosterone. Research at Chicago Medical School revealed
that drinking alcohol may cause the hormonal equivalent
of menopause in men. Alcohol not only affects sexual
function, but also helps set the stage for a heart attack
and other dangerous conditions.
Alcoholism. Excessive alcohol consumption disrupts
hormone levels and can lead to nerve damage. This type
of impotence may be reversible or permanent depending
on the severity of the nerve damage. Some clinical studies
suggest about 25 percent of all alcoholics become impotent
-- even after they stop drinking.
- We can see the following effects of alcohol.
- Alcohol affects accuracy and consistency of
a task more so than it affects speed.
- Significant memory loss occurs with high doses
of alcohol and may develop into blackouts involving
amnesia.
- Larges doses of alcohol frustrate sexual performance.
- Sex lives become disturbed deficient, and ineffectual.
- Impotency occurs, sometimes reversible with
the return of sobriety.
When treatment of underlying physical or psychological
problems fails to restore potency, a man and his sexual
partner can consider one of the following solutions:
The most popular treatments for impotency are described
in this site: www.impotence-guide.com.
However, the new treatment, Cialis
is made by Eli Lilly and biotechnology firm ICOS. For
more information, please visit the official site of
Cialis.
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