What Happens If I Take More Than the Recommended Dose?
The size of the dose does matter. In studies
of patients who took 50 mg of Viagra, 70% reported improved erections
after 12 weeks of use. But that number jumped to 82% with 100
mg, the maximum recommended dose.
If 100 mg is good, you might think 200 mg would
be better, but that wasn't the case. In studies, 200 mg of Viagra
didn't work any better than 100 mg.
In fact, above 100 mg, pretty much all you get
out of more Viagra is more side effects. Abnormal vision is a
problem only 11% of the time with 100 mg, but jumps to between
40% and 50% with 200 mg, for instance. One-quarter of men who
use 200 mg experience facial flushing, while 15% report stomach
problems.
There's been little study of what happens when
Viagra is taken at very high doses. But in one small study of
20 healthy men who took between 200 mg and 800 mg of Viagra, 95%
experienced some side effect that lasted far longer than usual.
Vision problems lasted as long as eight hours among the 50% of
men who experienced them. And one subject taking 600 mg reported
an erection lasting five hours, a potentially harmful problem.
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