Viagra's Effect on Nerve Activity.

PositionBrief Article

The drug sildenafil citrate--better known as Viagra--causes a dramatic increase in the nerve activity associated with cardiovascular function, especially during physical and mental stress, bolstering recommendations that men with severe cardiovascular disease use caution when taking the drug. This finding comes from researchers at the University of Iowa Cardiovascular Research Center, Iowa City.

"Little is known about Viagra's effect on the cardiovascular system, particularly during situations when the cardiovascular system is under stress, as it is during sexual activity," notes Bradley G. Phillips, assistant professor in the university's College of Pharmacy. "Recent concern and reports of heart attacks, arrhythmias, and even deaths temporally related to Viagra use in patients with heart failure initially raised questions about the drug's effect on the cardiovascular system."

Researchers studied 14 healthy men, ages 25 to 39, who were given a 100mm dose of Viagra or a placebo on two separate days. Men who received Viagra on the first visit were given the placebo on their second visit and vice-versa. Neither the participants nor the researchers knew which drugs were being administered on either of the study days.

The researchers took baseline measurements of subjects' blood pressure and heart rates, noradrenaline levels, and sympathetic...

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