Drug
shown to improve common male sexual problem
September 07, 2006
A drug designed to treat premature ejaculation
works well and is safe, researchers said on
Friday.
Dapoxetine, an antidepressant known as a selective
serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI), is the
first treatment specifically for premature ejaculation.
Premature ejaculation affects between 27 and
34 percent of all men, according the American
Urological Association.
In two trials involving 2,600 men with premature
ejaculation, the treatment developed by drug
maker Johnson & Johnson's Alza Corporation
unit was effective and delayed orgasm.
"On-demand dapoxetine is an effective
and generally well tolerated treatment for men
with moderate-to-severe premature ejaculation,"
Dr Jon Pryor, of the University of Minnesota
in Minneapolis who led the study, said a report
in The Lancet medical journal.
Men in the studies received a placebo or the
drug which they took one to three hours before
having sex. After 12 weeks on the treatment
there was a three - to four-fold increase in
the time to ejaculation.
"Dapoxetine also improved patients' perceptions
of control over ejaculation, satisfaction with
sexual intercourse, and overall impression of
change in conditions. Partners benefited through
improved satisfaction with sexual intercourse,"
Pryor added.
Side effects of the drug included nausea, diarrhea,
headache and dizziness.
Last October, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
declined to approve the drug. The company said
it would continue to develop the treatment and
would address questions raised by the FDA.
Premature ejaculation affects more men than
erectile
dysfunction, the condition that made Pfizer
Inc.'s impotence drug Viagra
a blockbuster.
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060908/hl_nm/sex_dc_1 |