вторник, 1 ноября 2011 г.

WOOF BOYS

Woof Boys Sexual Enhancement

Lust and Love Nasal Spray

www.woofboys.com.au





LUST & LOVE intranasal delivery technology program

What is Lust and Love IntraNasal delivery technology ?

Lust and Love nasal delivery technology is a formulated medication that assists with sexual arousal, stimulations and performance. It is indicated for use in treatment of premature ejaculation, erectile dysfunction and impotence in men and aids in sexual arousal and performance in both men and women. The nasal delivery technology bottle consists of 25 doses.

Who uses Lust and Love Nasal delivery technology?
Lust and Love nasal delivery technology is used by both men and women with or without sexual disorders. Any age group from 18 - 80's plus. Suitability issues may vary

How does Lust and Love Nasal delivery technology work?
Lust and Love nasal delivery technology is a mixture of AP and PH. When delivered into the nasal passage the AP component has excitatory influences on the brain, which in turn sends messages to the sexual organs and acts to assist with arousal and sexual stimulation. The PH component acts to increase blood flow to the sexual organs, and hence assisting with erections.

How long may it last?
Takes effect in approximately 15 - 20 minutes and may last for 6 - 7 hours.
Bottle contains 25 doses.
Results may vary.

Dosage Description:

A bottle of “Lust & Love” nasal delivery technology is a 5 ml formulation and delivers approximately 50 nasal delivery technologys in total. This is equivalent to a maximum of 25 doses.
One to two delivery technologys per nostril when necessary. DO NOT exceed this dosage.

How to use:
Shake the bottle gently. Tilt your head backwards and activate one or two delivery technologys (max) per nostril. It is advisable to start with the minimal dosage (one delivery technology per nostril) for the first few sessions.

The delivery technology should be allowed to SIT in the nasal passage for 5 minutes.
DO NOT inhale the delivery technology as this will reduce its effectiveness.

Side Effects:
This medication has minimal side effects. However in the case of uncommon nausea or dizziness, you should lie down and drink extra fluids until these symptoms subside. Also uncommon nasal irritations may occur.

Storage:
It is common knowledge that all medications require to be stored in cool environments

Shelf Life:

Please ask for shelf life of any medications included in the program during your consultation

How much does it cost?
Lust and Love nasal delivery technology program only costs AUD $320 including postage & handling Australia.
This includes 25 doses per program and available for purchase here or Ph: 1300 36 19 13 hotline.



PINK PASSION ™ NEW

Indications:
Pink passion is a pharmaceutically formulated program which is indicated for use in the treatment of female orgasmic dysfunction and for assisting with sexual arousal.

Formulation:
Pink Passion a compounded mixture of four medications. This mixture works synergistically to increase the sensitivity and blood flow to the clitoris, and therefore resulting in female sexual arousal and improved orgasmic function.

Description:
A metered dosage bottle of “Pink Passion” program provides 30 applications.

Dosage:
For orgasmic dysfunction, the best results are achieved when the cream is applied continually on a daily basis. It should also be applied half an hour before sexual activity. For assisting with sexual arousal, apply when necessary half an hour before sexual activity is anticipated.

How to use:
One metered dosage of the cream should be applied liberally in the clitoral region as directed above.

Side effects:
In rare circumstances, this cream may cause a localized skin irritation or allergic skin rash. In these circumstances, please stop using the cream.

Storage:
It is common knowledge that all medications require to be stored in cool environments

Shelf life:
Please ask for shelf life of any medications included in the program during your consultation

How much does it cost?
Pink Passion program only costs AUD $200 including postage & handling Australia.
Available for purchase here or Ph: 1300 36 19 13 hotline.

Top

About Us | Medcial Conditions| Programs | Contact Us | Privacy Policy

Bade Medical Institute © 2006-2007. All Rights Reserved

MORE INFORMATION

Lust and Love

"Is the World Ready for Libido in a Nasal Spray?"
Bade Medical Institute investigates the Aphrodisiacs of the 21st century
Now available to Australia and the world with the
Intranasal delivery technology program fro men and women
By Julian Dibbell

Horn of rhinoceros. Penis of tiger. Root of sea holly. Husk of the emerald-green blister beetle known as the Spanish fly. So colorful and exotic is the list of substances that have been claimed to heighten sexual appetite that it’s hard not to feel a twinge of disappointment on first beholding the latest entry—a small white plastic nasal inhaler containing an odorless, colorless synthetic chemical called PT-141. Plain as it is, however, there is one thing that distinguishes PT-141 from the 4,000 years’ worth of recorded medicinal aphrodisiacs that precede it: It actually works.

And it’s coming to a medicine cabinet near you. The drug will soon enter Phase 3 clinical trials, the final round of testing before it goes to the Food and Drug Administration for review, and with the FDA’s approval it could reach the market in as soon as three years. The full range of possible risks and side effects has yet to be determined, but already this much is known: Putting that inhaler up your nose and popping off a dose of PT-141 results, in most cases, in a stirring in the loins in as few as fifteen minutes. Women, according to one set of results, feel “genital warmth, tingling and throbbing,” not to mention “a strong desire to have sex.” Among men, who’ve been tested with the drug more extensively, the data set is, shall we say, richer:

“With PT-141, you feel good, not only sexually aroused,” reported anonymous patient 007, a participant in a Phase 2 trial, “you feel younger and more energetic.” Said another patient: “It helped the libido. So you have the urge and the desire. . . . You get this humming feeling; you’re ready to take your pants off and go.” And another: “Twice me and my wife had sex twice in one night. I came in [to work] and I just raved about it: ‘Jesus, guys . . . 58 years old and you don’t do that.’ ” Tales of pharmaceutically induced sexual prowess among 58-year-olds are common enough in the age of the Little Blue Pill, but they don’t typically involve quite so urgent a repertoire of humming, throbbing, tingling, and double-dipping. Or as patient 128 put it: “My wife knows. She can tell the difference between viagra cialis online pharmacy pharmacy and PT-141.”

The precise mechanisms by which PT-141 does its job remain unclear, but the rough idea is this: Where Viagra acts on the circulatory system, helping blood flow into the penis, PT-141 goes straight to the brain itself. And there it goes to work, switching on the same neural circuitry that lights up when a person actually, you know, wants to.

“It’s not merely allowing a sexual response to take place more easily,” explains Michael A. Perelman, co-director of the Human Sexuality Program at New York Presbyterian Hospital and a sexual-medicine adviser on the PT-141 trials. Though he cautions against jumping to conclusions, he’s hopeful that the drug represents a breakthrough. “It may be having an effect, literally, on how we think and feel.”

Palatin Technologies, the New Jersey–based maker of PT-141, has hopes of its own. Once the company gets FDA approval for the drug, Palatin plans to market it to the same crowd Viagra targets: male erectile-dysfunction patients. Approval as a treatment for female sexual dysfunction may follow, perhaps bringing relief to postmenopausal and other women with truly physiological barriers to sexual happiness. In the wake of Pfizer’s failed attempts to prove Viagra works for women, and amid growing recognition that it doesn’t even do the trick for large numbers of men, these two markets alone could make PT-141 a pharmaceutical blockbuster.

But let’s face facts: A drug that makes you not only able to but eager to isn’t going to remain the exclusive property of the severely impaired. As with Viagra, there will no doubt be extensive off-label use of PT-141. Fast-acting and long-lasting, packaged in an easily concealed, single-use nasal inhaler, unaffected by food or alcohol consumption, PT-141 seems bound to take its place alongside MDMA, cocaine, poppers, and booze itself in the pantheon of club drugs. If the chemical is all it’s cracked up to be, the perennial pharmacological dilemma of the pickup scene—namely, how to maximize the fun when the drinks required to set the mood are always more than enough to dull the senses—would appear to have found its solution.

You’ve been there yourself, after all: a third or fourth date, a late night of rich food, hard liquor, mildly exhausting erotic tension. Can you admit to yourself now, however hungrily you may have anticipated the evening’s scheduled consummation, that there was a part of you, when the moment arrived, that really would have rather been at home watching CSI?




суббота, 29 октября 2011 г.

Launch of an Online Men's Sexual Health Referral Network, Pfizer and New York university School of Medicine




"There have be tons study trialling acid-suppression in these two classes of drugs -- PPIs and H2RAs (also agreed as H2-blockers or H2s) -- but to a certain dimension few studies have compared the two type of drugs in an OTC setting where on earth thus many of these analysis be in earlier times relevant," say Philip Miner, MD, Clinical Professor of Medicine at the University of Oklahoma and organize investigator at Oklahoma Foundation in column of Digestive Research.



The analysis, which examine with the sole purpose grown splurge of second-generation antidepressants, bring into woman a centre of limelight subsequent to 293 published study. Of those, 187 be judge to be of devout or normal effectiveness. The analysis relate the drugs' benefits and risk inwardly the psychotherapy of upper body depressive psychosis, dysthymia (a seasoned, less-severe add able to of depression), and subsyndromal melancholy (an acute tendency disorder that be supplementary digit inflexible than major depression).



"Millions of men hold received celebratory treatment to promote their sexual health. However, in spite of advancement in treatment selection, research extravaganza several men with sexual online pharmacy assistance, as ably as ED, loiter raw," said Richard Siegel, MD, advanced medical bureaucrat, Sexual Health at Pfizer. "Because this be traditionally in the red to awkwardness or paucity of direction, these men constraint an easy, confidential resource resembling www.bestdrugsnow.com to access knowing and supportive healthcare professionals who can pilfer their concerns critically and provide relevant diagnosis and treatment." Criteria for association in the network be developed inimitably by the New York University School of Medicine Department of Urology. Dr. Andrew McCullough, Associate Clinical Professor, Department of Urology, and Director of Male Sexual Health, Fertility, and Microsurgery at New York University School of Medicine head this initiative. Healthcare professionals participating in the network must stand for both go through in and solace with helping men improve their sexual health.




вторник, 3 мая 2011 г.

viagra generico (Sildenafil Citrate) 100 mg

See also: order cialis | cialis | 

viagra generico (Sildenafil Citrate) 100 mg


Sildenafilo (Citrato de sildenafilo) se usa para tratar la disfunción eréctil (impotencia, incapacidad para conseguir o para mantener una erección) en los hombres. El Sildenafilo pertenece a una clase de medicamentos llamados inhibidores de fosfodiesterasa (PDE) y funciona al incrementar el flujo sanguíneo al pene durante la estimulación sexual. El aumento del flujo sanguíneo puede causar una erección.
El Sildenafilo no cura la disfunción eréctil ni aumenta el deseo sexual; tampoco previene el embarazo o la difusión de enfermedades que son transmitidas por vía sexual, como el virus de la inmunodeficiencia humana (VIH).

How do you cope with stress, doctor?

How do you cope with stress, order cialis?

I've been really enjoying my time away from work. Taking time to pause tends to make me a bit philosophical and I'm going to write about something that I've been giving quite a lot of thought to.

"How do you cope with stress?"

This was one of the questions I was asked at my interview for medical school when I was seventeen years old and it’s something I’ve been pondering recently.

Without a shadow of a doubt, working as a cheap cialis can be incredibly stressful. There have been times during or after emergencies when I’ve been close to losing it completely but, more insidiously, there’s an undercurrent of stress that all doctors have to cope with. How we cope with this is something that is hardly ever spoken about at work, or even outside work. I think there is something quite fundamentally challenging about the environment we doctors have to work in and I’ll try and explain why.

As individuals, people who apply to medical school are very comfortable and happy with health and healthy people. We see good health as being important and something to strive for. Part of the reason we go to medical school in the first place is because we want to help other people achieve the good health that we see as being so important. It’s not a great leap of logic to assume that someone like Slobodan Milosevic wouldn’t have been interested in applying to medical school. So, it follows that the people who apply to medical school are at ease and are comfortable in environments where people are healthy.

As a doctor, you are put in an environment where people are not healthy. You have to work every day in hospitals and hospitals are full of ill people. In other words, you spend the majority of your time in an environment that is the direct opposite to the one in which you feel most comfortable. At any given time, the sickest people in the whole region are right there in your workplace. You’re in an environment when people are so ill that they die. They die every day. You try and help, you try as hard as you can, but they still die. They still die every day. For a person who is most comfortable among the healthy, this sort of environment automatically causes stress. Sometimes great amounts of stress, sometimes so much stress that the doctor can’t cope and ends up having a breakdown or even committing suicide.

Which brings me back to the point of the article – how do we cope? Why don’t all doctors kill themselves? Why do the majority of my medical colleagues honestly tell me that they “enjoy their job?”

It starts in medical school. During your journey through medical school, you learn a hell of a lot of stuff. Medical students will be able to tell you what the sartorious muscle does, why we always sniff when we cry, how to spot cancerous cell down a microscope, at what gestational age the foetal heart beats for the first time, and so on and so on… but I’m now realising that one of the most important things you learn as an undergraduate is how to cope with the hospital environment. You learn how to cope with disease, how to cope with death and, more fundamentally, how to cope with the stress that disease and death will cause to you. You’re introduced to the hospital in a very measured way and, even though we don’t realise it at that stage, it’s at medical school that we learn our coping mechanisms.

But how we cope is not really tested until we become doctors.

Before I started working, I would try and be conscienscious and I’d spend lots of time in the hospital, but at the back of my mind, I knew that I could leave at any time. If I felt unwell I could leave, if I felt tired I could go home and everything would be just fine without me. The patients didn’t need me, their relatives didn’t need me, the hospital staff didn’t need me and I knew that I wouldn’t really be missed if I wasn’t there.

That all changed on my first shift as a doctor. Suddenly, the responsibility was mine. I inherited 25 patients to look after and I had to cope with the fear, the anxiety, and responsibility of trying as best I could to make them all better and get them home. And try I did, but here’s the thing – the work never ends. One patient gets well enough to leave and within minutes, there’ll be a new patient in the bed that’s just been vacated. A whole new person with a whole new set of problems for me to try and remedy and the whole cycle starts again. And this happens again and again ad infinitum.

What I’m trying to get across is that those coping mechanisms that we develop in med school get tested to destruction when we become doctors. Some people’s coping mechanisms stand up, others’ don’t and people have to try and find new ways of coping. I’ve scratched my head a bit and I’m going to try and write about some of the ways that doctors cope with stress.

Working harder

From what I’ve seen, this is the most common one by far. I’ve already mentioned that your work as a doctor never actually stops. There’s always another patient to clerk, another blood test to do, another X-ray to review, another letter to write, another audit to complete, another relative to talk to, another referral to make, the list goes on and on and on. You really can bury yourself in your work to the point that it seems like nothing else matters.

Dr X will say, “I can’t possibly go home yet, I have another four sets of blood tests to do, and repeat Mr Brown’s ABG and make sure everything is prepared for tomorrow’s consultant ward-round…” However, if you scratch the surface a little, you’ll find that the real reason that Dr X is still at work four hours after her shift finished is that Dr X finds NOT working far more stressful than working. You see, when you’re at work, you don’t have time to feel stressed because there’s so much more stuff to get done. At home on your own though… well that’s another story. So Dr X works harder and harder and harder so she doesn’t have to face up to her own thoughts and stresses.
I’m guessing that this sort of thing was more common in the days when junior doctors had to work all day and all night every day and every night, but it’s still very common now in 2009.

Colleagues

Ever wondered why at university medical students seemed to hang out only with other medical students? We just didn’t seem to mix as much with other students did we? It’s partly due to the (relative) intensity of the degree we chose to study, but more importantly it’s that we automatically had a common bond with each other. We had a shared set of experiences that only other medical students could understand, because they were there too. I remember when I was a Fresher and I told a history student that I had to dissect a real, dead person as part of my studies. He was fascinated (and a little grossed out), but he didn’t really understand what it felt like because he wasn’t there. I tried to share with him that I had a nagging feeling that cutting this man’s neck apart was WRONG, WRONG, WRONG because, he was alive once. I tried to tell him that I imagined what he would have been like when he was alive (Jovial? Stupid? Intelligent? Funny? Rich? Poor?) and I had such a massive amount of respect that he’d let me do this to his body after death. But he didn’t get it, he couldn’t get past the part that I “actually cut his neck open – gross!” so I gave up.
This clubbing together of medics doesn’t change after we graduate, if anything, it becomes more marked. Most of my good friends are doctors and it really helps having someone to talk to who’s been through the same experiences. Not only that, you also work with much more senior doctors and nurses who’ve been through it all before, you have role models and people you idolise and this all helps you make sense and cope with events going on around you.

Friends and family

From what I’ve seen, having supportive friends and family is probably the thing that keeps most doctors sane. From a personal point of view, I know that being able to let of steam and rant about the system we work in is incredibly cathartic, even if the person I’m ranting at doesn’t really know what the hell I’m going on about. My friends and family have put up with me when work has made me furious, despondent, frightened or just plain depressed. I know I’m really lucky to have such a supportive social network, whether it’s my Dad saying he’s proud of what I’ve done or it’s my sister telling me that I’m “obviously a good doctor” (like she’d know!), it all helps knowing that they’re there.

Religion

“Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I shall fear no evil.” There can be no doubt that having a faith and a strong belief that there is more to the world than the (sometimes truly horrific) things we see before us helps doctors cope with what they have to do.

Sex

If you work in a hospital for any length of time, you’ll become aware of a strong undercurrent of sexuality with the staff. It’s been there at every hospital I’ve worked. Sometimes it’s understated, but often it’s explicit. There’s lots of flirting, lots of “complementing,” and, if you want it, there’s lots of shagging. I doubt many would admit it but often, this is a coping mechanism. After all it’s much easier to motivate yourself to go to work if you know that a certain medical house officer will be there isn’t it? And it’s much easier to get through the day with thoughts of what the said house officer was doing to you last night running through your head…

Alcohol

Everyone I know has done this, myself included. We’ve all come home and said “I’ve had a REALLY REALLY shitty day at work, come on, we’re going out and I am going to get SMASHED. I want to be so off my face that I can’t see…”
And we’ve gone out and got totally of our faces.
In and of itself, I don’t think that this isn’t really a big problem, but the thing about alcohol is that it can become incredibly destructive. What started out as a big session once in a blue moon after a particularly shitty week turns into going out every weekend and getting blasted. But you’re not doing it because it’s fun, you’re not doing it to have a good time, in fact, you don’t actually enjoy getting drunk at all, you’re just doing it because when you’re drunk, you can forget about the hospital and how being in the hospital makes you feel. Then you find yourself drinking routinely everyday after work, slowly drinking more and more each evening. Then you suddenly find that you can’t get through the day without a drink… At this point your work colleagues start talking about you and how you smell of gin half way through the morning…
Alcohol is insidious, I wouldn’t really call it a “coping strategy” but I’d predict that the vast majority of doctors lie somewhere along the scale that starts with “getting drunk to forget once in a blue moon” and ends with “being an alcoholic.”

Drugs

Doctors doing drugs is a huge taboo, but we know it goes on. The reasons are pretty similar to those outlined above for alcohol. Remember that doctors know more about the drugs they are taking than your average man on the street, we have much more access to uncontaminated drugs, we know what their side-effects are and we know how to hide them.

Other activities

One of the thing I’ve noticed in my career so far is that as junior doctors’ working hours have reduced (currently, a junior doc will work an average of between 44 and 60 hrs every week), doctors are taking more opportunity to “get away from it all.” Doctors now have more time to develop hobbies, be that sports, hiking, travelling, music, painting, charity work, it seems to me that the general chit-chat among doctors isn’t as focused on medicine as it used to be and I believe this is the result of more of having a life outside work.

I appreciate that this post has become very long and really, I’m just jotting down my own personal observations and thoughts but, like I said, how we actually cope with what we have to do is not something that gets spoken about very often.