Levitra and the risk of heart disease
There’s no doubt that men are very embarrassed by the reality of erectile dysfunction and the majority refuse to admit it, even to their doctors. This is less of a problem than it used to be given the development of the online pharmacies. Now the men affected can at least buy some relief and preserve their privacy. Unfortunately, this also increases the risk of heart disease developing unchecked. The preventative treatment is cheap and very effective. If younger men were more prepared to consult their doctors when erectile dysfunction first becomes an obvious problem, more lives would be saved.
There are two different responses to this. If the evidence of the linkage between erectile dysfunction and heart disease is so clear, can we persuade men to come in for testing? One of the most impressive pieces of evidence comes from the Massachusetts Male Aging Study which followed the health of some 1700 men over a ten-year period from 1987. Although dysfunction does grow more common as men age, the clearest linkage was between high levels of cholesterol and blood pressure, diabetes and smoking where the risk of heart disease increased by a factor of four. If more than one factor was present, the linkage rose. Other studies have shown that carrying excess body weight is also a significant contributor. Similar results have been produced in studies looking at the incidence of prostate cancer in which studies over longer periods of time showed the risk of a heart attack rising by between 25 and 45% depending on age. This evidence has been openly discussed over the last ten years and the number of men asking for a tests for heart disease based on their dysfunction has fallen.
The medical profession has therefore decided to be more proactive. If you come in for a consult and your cholesterol levels are high, you have blood pressure problems, you have diabetes or you smoke, the doctor is likely to ask you whether you have sexual problems. Now it’s always open to you to lie but think carefully before you do. The younger you are, the greater the risk of a stroke or heart attack within five years of the first signs of sexual problems. The sooner you start on a program of calcium-channel blockers, diuretics, beta-blockers and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors the better your chances of survival. So it’s really in your interests to be completely honest. Once you are shown to be at risk, it makes no sense to deny yourself the treatment that can save your life (and keep your sex life going as well).
As the most powerful of the three drugs prescribed to treat erectile dysfunction, you may find Levitra the best choice. It gives you the strongest response at the lowest dose. The lower the dose, the less the problems of interaction with the other drugs necessary to treat the symptoms of heart disease. So, do yourself a favor and approach all questions of erectile dysfunction with honesty. The doctor has a good reason for asking. Respect that professionalism and get the treatment you need including Levitra.

