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Drugs for impotence after prostate surgery
It is not easy to learn that you have cancer. When he was diagnosed with prostate cancer
Ed Gross said: "Hearing the words, it was a shock, a surprise, you know, because we all
hope that it's not going to be that." This was about two years ago.
For patients with this disease one of treatment option is surgery, but Ed knew that a side
effect of operation could be impotence, so he decided to avoid surgery.
"I felt I had a lot of life to live yet, and I wanted that quality, so it was not an easy decision."
Thanks to drugs like Viagra and Cialis a prostate surgery doesn't mean impotence anymore.
Viagra works in lots of people inspite of 30 to 40 percent fails in prostate cancer therapy.
Levitra improves impotence in nearly 50 percent of men after surgery. The newest
drug Cialis helps more than 60 percent of men in that very delicate situation. Viagra, Levitra
and Cialis are FDA approved.
When Ed wasn't ready to accept surgery he was right, "I felt I had a lot of life to live yet, and
I wanted that quality, so it was not an easy decision."
In a comment about impotence treatment Doctor Irwin Goldstein, a sexual medicine physician, says
" There are many, many therapies.
We need to make it like all other medical fields. Doctors and patients alike hope communication
and newer therapies will likely make surgery easier to face. "
NOTE: The Information on this site is provided for information only,
and is not meant to substitute for the advice of your own physician or other medical professional.
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