What Happens When a Man First Takes a Viagra Pill?
Absolutely
nothing. Pfizer Inc., the maker of Viagra, long has said the drug
isn't an aphrodisiac, but many men who take it still expect to
feel something.
They don't. Among several men interviewed who
have used the drug, not one of them experienced any feeling or
sensation after taking the pill. The nothingness is so intense
that the most common reaction is a slight panic that the drug
isn't going to work.
"That was my worst fear, that it wasn't
going to do anything," says Steve Brykman of Los Angeles,
who tried Viagra once nine months ago, when he believed job and
financial stresses were interfering with his sex life. After taking
the pill, "there was nothing at all," says Mr. Brykman,
33 years old. "I just felt completely normal."
Though you may not feel anything, things are
happening in the body. As the pill moves into the bloodstream,
it starts to block an enzyme called PDE-5. Blocking the enzyme
eventually increases blood flow to areas where PDE-5 is most heavily
concentrated -- the penis, nose and skin. Diminished blood flow
to the penis is the cause of most erectile-dysfunction problems.
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