English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I have had E.D. for around 10 months. The pills (viagra, lav., ect.) are to expensive and my insurance does not cover the cost.
Does anyone know of a cheaper, safer way to increase the blood flow in the groin area ?
I wear boxers, take Zinc, ect., everything the Dr. recommended.
Any ideas???

2006-10-06 18:26:02 · 6 answers · asked by hdpatch 4 in Health Men's Health

6 answers

eat no bread, drink no beer but take olive leaf extract, this destroys the yeast fungus

green tea, chili, blueberries, cranberries/ juice, ginger & walnuts hawthorn & cayenne pepper capsules are great.
indian ginseng will amaze u!!
unhulled tahini with organic honey will make the muscle stronger

eat no oils, fried food, canola, cheese, beef, pasta, coffee

2006-10-06 18:33:48 · answer #1 · answered by jojo 2 · 1 0

ask your doctor for free samples of the medicine. drug companies give these samples to the doctor and most doctors are real good about giving them out. Ask your doctor about the vaccum pump. It helps pull more blood to the area creating an erection. Make your blood pressure is down as high blood pressure can cause ED. Best of luck....It amazes me that insurance companies don't pay for these on their prescription plans.

2006-10-07 01:31:23 · answer #2 · answered by bramblerock 5 · 0 0

Ok, so why are you having ED. Do you have diabetes? Is it a mental problem? Have you been examined thoroughly?
Whats with the blood flow in your groin area, and how old are you, not that it really matters that much?

2006-10-07 01:29:42 · answer #3 · answered by happydawg 6 · 0 1

Treatment depends on the cause. Testosterone supplements may be used for cases due to hormonal deficiency. However, the cause is more usually lack of adequate penile blood supply as a result of damage to inner walls of blood vessels. This damage is more frequent in older men, and often associated with disease, in particular diabetes.

Treatments (with the exception of testosterone supplementation, where effective) work on a temporary basis: they enable an erection to be attained and maintained long enough for intercourse, but do not permanently improve the underlying condition.

ED can in many cases be treated by drugs taken orally, injected, or as penile suppositories. These drugs increase the efficacy of NO, which dilates the blood vessels of corpora cavernosa. When oral drugs or suppositories fail, injections (e.g. of apomorphine) into the erectile tissue of the penile shaft may work.

When pharmacological methods fail, a purpose-designed external vacuum pump can be used to attain erection, with a separate compression ring fitted to the penis to maintain it. These pumps should be distinguished from other "penis pumps" (supplied without compression rings) which, rather than being used for temporary treatment of impotence, are claimed to increase penis length if used frequently, or vibrate as an aid to masturbation.

More drastically, inflatable or rigid penile implants may be fitted surgically. Implants are irreversible and costly.

All these mechanical methods are based on simple principles of hydraulics and mechanics and are quite reliable, but have their disadvantages.

In a few cases there is a vascular problem which can be treated surgically.

An external vacuum pump will produce an engorged penis with success approaching 90%; a penis ring will maintain this state, although it should be removed after not more than 30 minutes. The erection is not as rigid or hard as a natural erection; drugs or injections, when they work, may be preferable. Various studies show the degree of satisfaction of users and their partners to be vary variable, even when drugs and injections do not work; in one study, about 20% of men who tried a (high-priced) pump decided to proceed to purchase one. Other studies show higher percentages of satisfied users.
In some cases frequent use of a vacuum pump can eventually improve the degree of erection attainable without use of the pump. Claims of cheap "penis pumps" to permanently increase maximum penis size should be viewed with caution, however.
Some vacuum pumps, such as Osbon ErecAid, are sold at a higher price with 100% refund within 90 days to dissatisfied users, with a somewhat lower price with 50% refund guarantee.This pump is supported by medical insurance schemes, including the UK's NHS and US Medicare and private insurers. The better-known pumps sell for prices of around 200 GBP/400 USD (2006). There is at least one vacuum pump with rings which sells for around one-fifth of this price.
A double-blind study appears to show evidence that ginseng is better than placebo.

2006-10-07 03:33:16 · answer #4 · answered by Ajeesh Kumar 4 · 0 0

Consult a doctor(psychiatrist or sexologist) first. ED is not a disease to be cured. Your E greatly depends on mental health than physical health.

2006-10-07 01:50:44 · answer #5 · answered by Sivabalan 1 · 0 1

maybe it's about that time for u to stop worrying about sex and put your mind to other things.

2006-10-07 05:08:24 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers