A former Marine buddy who has lived the life of a wild man from the time he volunteered and served a full tour as a Marine to live a wilder biker life since still wears his US marines shirts and yes young women still come up and randomly hug his 6'2" frame and say thank you and he loves to reciprocate. However he has lived a wild life and the VA has him on nitro meds for cardiology issues and ED pills are a big no no can stop your heart... and don't have much effect on him - enter the solution for you hard driving hard living bad biker boys like him when facing similar issues...
He says it works great and the VA prescribes and provides it for him for a $7 co-pay - at least the VA is good for something!
He used Edex - said you jam it into the root of your unit and five minutes later batters up and saddle her on up.
Says best to make a head call just before the bang - take a hot shot and then hop right back in the sack and go at it - it is not 36 hour cialis!
Your woman will wonder what turned you into a walking 19 year old hard on again - while it lasts.
http://www.sexhealthmatters.org/erectile...ysfunction
Self-Injection - Erectile Dysfunction
What types of injections are used to treat ED?
Oral medications don't work for everyone. Many men may be prescribed medicines that go directly, via injection, into the penis. Injection therapy may use a single drug or a combination of drugs. Single drug injection therapy uses alprostadil, a type of prostaglandinE1 (PGE1), and is called either Caverject® or Edex®. Combination therapies, called "bi-mix" (for 2 drugs mixtures) or "tri-mix" (for 3 drugs mixtures), are a mixture of either two, or all three, of the following most commonly used drugs: papaverine, phentolamine and/or alprostadil. Not all bi-mix or tri-mix medications are identical - the amount of the individual drugs may vary from pharmacy to pharmacy.
Alprostadil is a vasoactive agent that is a synthetic version of the chemical prostaglandin E. This chemical helps relax the smooth muscle tissue in the penis to enhance blood flow needed for an erection.
Papaverine and phentolamine also belong to this group of medicines called vasodilators (drugs that relax smooth muscle tissue, causing arteries to open and allowing an influx of blood flow).
Most men who do not respond to oral drug therapies used to treat ED find injection therapies to be effective. Success rates with self-injection are roughly 85 percent of patients. Injections may also be helpful for men who are taking other medications, such as oral nitrates, that should not be used at the same time as some oral medications for ED.
It is great to be a man in 2015 Hoorah!