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Increase the impact of Cialis
February 26, 2007

Americans are puzzled about sex. Many of the first colonists were Puritans, and a strong puritanical streak still runs through our culture.

Although our sitcoms and series operas rely on sexual category to keep viewers watching, many of us consider this type of activity a guilty pleasure.

Despite our seeming obsession with sex on small screen, in movies and on the Web, Americans are in fact more watchers than doers. We're a voyeuristic society that seems content to observe others acting sexy.

According to some global sex surveys, Americans lag behind people in France, Greece, Croatia, Poland, Great Britain and even Kazakhstan in having sex.

Part of the complexity might be that Americans work too hard. A survey for the National Sleep Foundation found that nearly one-fourth of the couples surveyed were often too tired to engage in sexual activity.

We are so busy with work, family responsibilities, e-mail, television and other distractions that we just don't find sufficient time to relax and get in the mood. A commercial on small screen for the erectile-dysfunction drug Cialis asks, "If a relaxing moment turns into the right moment, will you be ready?" If there are no relaxing moments, however, Cialis won't do much good.

Besides being overscheduled and stressed out, many people are unclear about the differences between an anti-impotence drug like Cialis or Levitra and an aphrodisiac. When the first medicine against erectile dysfunction, Viagra, was introduced, it quickly became a household name. People talked about it with the kind of sneer reserved for raw oysters.

Those who expected Viagra to increase libido were soon disappointed. While this prescription is considered effective for helping a man achieve an erection, that achievement is possible only in the existence of sexual desire. Medical science is still looking for ways to increase libido.

There are a small number of compounds that might eventually turn out to be helpful for improving libido. Some years ago, Dutch researchers discovered that giving women a small dose of testosterone under the tongue increased their interest in an erotic video

A recent study found that sniff a compound isolated from men's sweat, androstadienone, could increase cortisol levels in women's blood and formulate their hearts beat more rapidly It also improved their mood and boost their sexual arousal.

Perhaps someday scientists will create a true aphrodisiac. Until then, Americans might need to learn how to relax and rediscover romance.


Source:
http://www.medindia.net/news/

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