Archive for the ‘Sex pills’ Category

Viagra’s 10th anniversary

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

Viagra pillsTen years ago this month the lives of millions of men and women were changed almost overnight by the advent of a little blue pill — the first oral treatment for impotence.

Viagra, developed by accident by scientists at Pfizer Laboratories, was first approved for use by the US Food and Drug Administration on March 27, 1998.

“Originally, we were testing sildenafil, the active drug in Viagra, as a cardiovascular drug and for its ability to lower blood pressure,” said Dr Brian Klee, senior medical director at Pfizer.

“But one thing that was found during those trials is that people didn’t want to give the medication back because of the side effect of having erections that were harder, firmer and lasted longer.”

Since Viagra went on the market it has been used by 35 million men around the globe, and it took impotence off the taboo list, making it infinitely easier to treat.

Urologists’ waiting rooms became busier as news got round that the condition, which was rechristened with a new, scientific name — erectile dysfunction, or ED — could be treated with a triangular blue pill.

Previous treatments had involved surgically inserting a prosthesis into the penis, injecting a substance into the male sex organ or using urethral suppositories.

“Viagra brought a lot more people into the office because of the ease of treatment,” Dr Irwin Shuman, a urologist of 40 years’ experience in Washington, told AFP.

“In the old days, when we didn’t have much in the way of treatment, we would do a lot more evaluation, looking for answers as to why somebody had the problem,” he said.

In one test, men would be observed while sleeping to see if erections occurred.

Men who failed to get the usual five to six erections per night were deemed to have a physical problem, and those who did get nocturnal erections were said to have a psychological problem and were sent to see a sex counsellor.

So Viagra helped move impotence out of the psychological realm and into the world of physical illnesses. “What we have come to understand in the past 10 years is that ED is a vascular disease,” said Klee.

“What happens is veins and arteries that deliver and remove blood from the penis are not working the way they should, and Viagra allows those vessels to dilate and increase blood flow to the penis,” he said.

Dr Abraham Morgentaler, director of Men’s Health Boston, and associate clinical professor of urology at Harvard Medical School, hailed Viagra as a “benefit to medicine.”

But, he added, the drug has not delighted all those who took it.

“There are two truths to Viagra: for those who refill (get a new prescription), it’s wonderful and they’re happy,” Morgentaler told AFP.

“But a lot of people look to Viagra for personal happiness, thinking a hard penis can resolve relationship issues,” and they end up disappointed, added the doctor and author of the book “The Viagra Myth.”

Some patients say taking Viagra “does not correspond to the way they want to have sex,” Morgentaler said.

Viagra works best on an empty stomach or after eating a low-fat meal, the medication’s official website says. It kicks in about 30 minutes after being taken, works for four hours, and only with sexual arousal, the website says.

But it’s not the answer for everyone. Morgentaler said he had a 78-year-old patient in his office who “didn’t like the idea of programming sex. Guys, and often women, too, don’t necessarily want to compromise the ideal of sex as something magical, spontaneous, romantic.”

Morgentaler also spoke of the darker side of Viagra, which has evolved since it and two other ED treatments became easily available over the Internet.

“It’s the use of Viagra by healthy young men who don’t need it,” he said.

“These young men take a pill whenever they go out … Maybe because they are inexperienced or shy and Viagra makes them more confident, or maybe because they have inflated ideas about what sex is supposed to be like from seeing Internet porn, which they also have easy access to, and they want to heighten their feelings of masculinity,” he said.

“I am concerned — not that these young men will get addicted physically, but that they will become psychologically dependent on Viagra,” said Morgentaler.

“Sex is an entree into a relationship, and most often what we want from a relationship is to be loved for what we are.

“But some of these young men feel they have to take a pill to be acceptable, and I fear they are potentially missing the opportunity to have true emotional connections with a partner, based on reality, not mythology.”

Viagra celebrates its 10th birthday

The potency enhancing drug Viagra has been on the market for 10 years. In 1998, pharmaceutical company Pfizer introduced the erection drug that was to change millions of lives at a stroke. A solution to erectile dysfunction had been found, and the taboo surrounding impotence was largely a thing of the past.

The little blue pill that enabled millions of couples to reawaken their sex lives was discovered by accident, says sexologist Vera Steenhart of the Dutch Sexology Association. Pfizer was actually looking for a drug for the heart problem angina pectoris. The pills didn’t appear to be benefiting the test subjects, but they refused to give them back. Ms Steenhart:

“The manufacturers found this strange. On further investigation, they found the drug gave the male patients an erection. They were extremely happy about it.”

Effect
The forerunner to Viagra was developed to make blood vessels relax. The test subjects were given the drug to improve blood circulation to the heart to reduce the chance of heart failure. Viagra has the same effect on the penis. When the man is sexually stimulated, the blood supply is improved and it becomes easier for him to maintain an erection.

It’s a myth that the pill can produce an unwanted erection. The user does actually have to be in the mood, so Viagra has little or no effect if he is unwilling to have sex or feels anxious about it. In that case it would be more appropriate for him to have a good talk with his partner or pay a visit to a psychologist or sexologist.

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Cialis for spontaneous sex

Saturday, March 1st, 2008

Cialis OnlineCanadian drug stores have begun stocking a new full-time version of an anti-impotence drug its makers say will allow men to be sexually “spontaneous,” day and night.

Cialis was originally designed to be taken on an “as needed” basis, with one dose lasting 24 to 36 hours, earning it the moniker “Le Weekend” when first approved in Europe in 2002.

Now it’s being repackaged and sold in a once-a-day, lower-dose version. Taken daily, the drug builds in a man’s body until it reaches a circulating level in the bloodstream that would allow a man to be sexually active “whenever the moment is right,” according to a news release issued by drug giant, Eli Lilly.

Dr. Gerald Brock says the once-a-day pill will appeal to men who find timing an issue.

“Taking the drug on a daily basis and having complete spontaneity is going to be a real, genuine advance,” says Brock, a urologist at St. Joseph’s Health Care in London, Ont. Brock has received speakers’ fees and research grants in the past from Eli Lilly.

Once-a-day Cialis will cost $3.80 per capsule, before dispensing fees.

Some critics are uncomfortable with the drug’s expansion and the idea of men taking erectile enhancers in perpetuity, or recreationally. Last year, more than 1.6 million prescriptions for erectile dysfunction drugs were dispensed by Canadian drugstores, according to prescription drug tracking firm IMS Health Canada. About 593,000 of those prescriptions were for tadalafil, the chemical name for Cialis.

“The limited virtue of these erectile dysfunction drugs was that men only needed to take it once in a while, as opposed to statins or osteoporosis drugs or anti-hypertensives,” says Leonore Tiefer, an associate clinical professor of psychiatry at New York University School of Medicine and Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York.

“On the surface, it seems like it makes life easier, but we know more drugs lead to more complications. In this case, it might be interpersonal complications.

“Is this something that the sexual partner has to give consent to, or even have knowledge of? Unless they’re using it for masturbation, they’re expecting to use it with a partner. If she doesn’t know this, she’s not being given her entitlement to consent.”

Another question is safety. Cialis belongs to a class of drugs known as PDE-5 inhibitors that includes Viagra and Levitra. The pills act on the chemical signals that open up the blood vessels in the penis.

“Is it safe to take a PDE-5 inhibitor every day? It probably is. These drugs are probably much safer than Aspirin,” says Dr. J. Paul Whelan, Braley-Gordon Chair of Urology at McMaster University in Hamilton.

The drugs aren’t thought to benefit men with normal sexual function. And there can be rare side effects, Whelan says, such as severe back muscle spasms.

He says once-a-day erectile dysfunction drugs can help with what is known as “penile rehabilitation” after prostate cancer surgery.

In addition, men who experience side effects with the “on demand” Cialis may better tolerate the once-a-day version, which comes in 2.5 and 5 milligram capsules, says Brock.

“And finally, we as urologists have people who are very sexually active — they may be having sex two or three or more times per week. By taking a very small dose of Cialis every day they can actually take less medication, have greater spontaneity, have lower side effects and, I think, at the end of the day have greater patient and partner satisfaction.”

About 50 per cent of men between the ages 40 and 70 experience erectile problems but only about half of those seek help for erectile dysfunction, or ED, Brock said.

Diabetes, high cholesterol, vascular disease, smoking, stress and relationship issues can increase the risk of erectile problems, Brock said.

Side effects of Cialis include headache, facial flushing and indigestion. The drug should not be used by men who are taking nitrates or those with cardiac disease “for whom sexual activity is not advisable,” Eli Lilly says.

How should I take Cialis?

Take Cialis exactly as it was prescribed for you. Do not take it in larger doses or for longer than recommended by your doctor. Follow the directions on your prescription label.

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Levitra for men with ED and dyslipidemia

Friday, December 14th, 2007

LevitraSchering-Plough said the results of a first prospective trial specifically designed to evaluate erectile function in erectile dysfunction (ED) patients with dyslipidemia showed that Levitra (vardenafil HCl), used in treating ED, significantly improves the ability of men with ED and dyslipidemia to achieve and maintain an erection for successful sexual intercourse.

The double-blind, placebo-controlled study is the first study to measure the safety and efficacy of a PDE 5 inhibitor in a cohort of men who all had ED and dyslipidemia. Results from the study of 395 men show that Levitra significantly increased rates of penetration (as measured by SEP2 scores) and the ability to maintain an erection (as measured by SEP3 scores) compared to placebo.

“ED is associated with high cholesterol, yet many physicians are not treating ED, a life-changing condition,” said Dr Martin Miner, clinical associate professor, Family Medicine, Brown University’s Warren Alpert School of Medicine. “This study provides further support that Levitra can successfully treat ED, even in men with a serious common condition like high cholesterol.”

Nearly 70 per cent of the estimated 30 million men in the United States who have ED also have other common conditions such as dyslipidemia (including high cholesterol), hypertension, or diabetes, which may lead to erectile dysfunction. Previous studies have demonstrated the efficacy and safety of Levitra in men with ED who also have high blood pressure or diabetes.

In the double-blind, placebo-controlled study, 395 men ages 18 to 64 that had ED and dyslipidemia were randomised to treatment with Levitra or placebo for 12 weeks.

Men treated with Levitra had statistically significant and clinically relevant improvements in SEP2 scores (a rating system that measures penetration) and SEP3 scores (a rating system that measures maintenance of erection) versus placebo (79.1 per cent and 66.7 per cent, respectively, for Levitra, vs. 51.9 per cent and 33.8 per cent, respectively, for placebo). IIEF-EF (International Index of Erectile Function) scores also were significantly higher for the Levitra group compared to the placebo group. These scores are evaluated based on a patient questionnaire and their daily diary response to specific questions about sexual performance.

Treatment-emergent adverse effects (occurring in = 5 per cent of patients) included headaches (9 per cent for Levitra, 1 per cent for placebo) and upper respiratory tract infections (5 per cent for Levitra, 3 per cent for placebo).

Erectile dysfunction (ED) is the consistent or recurrent inability of a man to attain and/or maintain a penile erection sufficient for sexual performance. ED can be a total inability to achieve an erection, an inconsistent ability to do so, or a tendency to sustain only brief erections. It is estimated that some degree of ED affects up to 30 million men in the United States.

Some of the most common treatments for ED include adjustments to lifestyle and better control of concomitant medical conditions as well as the use of oral medications or other forms of therapy. Treating related health conditions or reducing stress may help maintain erectile function.

Levitra (vardenafil HCl) is a prescription medicine that is indicated to treat erectile dysfunction (ED). Consistent with the effects of PDE5 inhibition, administration of Levitra with nitrates and nitric oxide donors is contraindicated.

In clinical trials, the most commonly reported adverse events with LEVITRA were headache, flushing, and rhinitis. Adverse events were generally transient.

Nonarteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (NAION) has been reported rarely postmarketing in temporal relationship with the use of PDE5 inhibitors, including Levitra. Sudden loss of hearing, sometimes with tinnitus and dizziness, also has been reported rarely in temporal association with the use of PDE5 inhibitors, including Levitra. It is not possible to determine if these events are related to PDE5 inhibitors or to other factors. Physicians should advise patients to stop use of PDE5 inhibitors, including Levitra, and seek prompt medical attention in the event of sudden loss of vision or hearing.

The recommended starting dose of Levitra is 10 mg. Titrate up to 20 mg or down to 5 mg based on efficacy and side effects.

You can also get some info about Levitra, its safety information, side effects and prices HERE or HERE.

Consumer Information

Generic Name: vardenafil
Brand Names: Levitra
What is Levitra?

Levitra relaxes muscles and increases blood flow to particular areas of the body.

Levitra is used to treat erectile dysfunction (impotence).

Levitra may also be used for purposes other than those listed in this medication guide.

Important information about Levitra
Do not take Levitra if you are also using a nitrate drug for chest pain or heart problems. This includes nitroglycerin (Nitrostat, Nitrolingual, Nitro-Dur, Nitro-Bid, and others), isosorbide dinitrate (Dilatrate-SR, Isordil, Sorbitrate), and isosorbide mononitrate (Imdur, ISMO, Monoket). Nitrates are also found in some recreational drugs such as amyl nitrate or nitrite (”poppers”). Taking Levitra with a nitrate medicine can cause a serious decrease in blood pressure, leading to fainting, stroke, or heart attack. If you become dizzy or nauseated, or have pain, numbness, or tingling in your chest, arms, neck, or jaw during sexual activity, stop and call your doctor right away. You could be having a serious side effect of Levitra. Do not take this medication more than once a day. Allow 24 hours to pass between doses. Contact your doctor or seek emergency medical attention if your erection is painful or lasts longer than 4 hours. A prolonged erection (priapism) can damage the penis.

A small number of patients have had a sudden loss of eyesight after taking Levitra. This type of vision loss is caused by decreased blood flow to the optic nerve of the eye. It is not clear whether Levitra is the actual cause of such vision loss. Sudden vision loss with Levitra use has occurred most often in people with heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, or certain pre-existing eye problems, and in those who smoke or are over 50 years old.

Stop using Levitra and get emergency medical help if you have sudden vision loss.

Before taking Levitra
Do not take Levitra if you are also using a nitrate drug for chest pain or heart problems. This includes nitroglycerin (Nitrostat, Nitrolingual, Nitro-Dur, Nitro-Bid, and others), isosorbide dinitrate (Dilatrate-SR, Isordil, Sorbitrate), and isosorbide mononitrate (Imdur, ISMO, Monoket). Nitrates are also found in some recreational drugs such as amyl nitrate or nitrite (”poppers”). Taking this medication with a nitrate medicine can cause a serious decrease in blood pressure, leading to fainting, stroke, or heart attack.

A small number of patients have had a sudden loss of eyesight after taking Levitra. This type of vision loss is caused by decreased blood flow to the optic nerve of the eye. It is not clear whether Levitra is the actual cause of such vision loss. Sudden vision loss with Levitra use has occurred most often in people with heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, or certain pre-existing eye problems, and in those who smoke or are over 50 years old.

Before taking this medication, tell your doctor if you have:

  • heart disease or heart rhythm problems;
  • a recent history (in the past 6 months) of a heart attack, angina (chest pain), or congestive heart failure;
  • a history of stroke or blood clots;
  • a personal or family history of “Long QT syndrome”;
  • high or low blood pressure;
  • liver disease;
  • kidney disease (or if you are on dialysis);
  • a blood cell disorder such as sickle cell anemia, multiple myeloma, or leukemia;
  • a bleeding disorder such as hemophilia;
  • a stomach ulcer;
  • retinitis pigmentosa (an inherited condition of the eye);
  • a physical deformity of the penis (such as Peyronie’s disease); or
  • if you have been told you should not have sexual intercourse for health reasons.

Levitra side effects

If you become dizzy or nauseated, or have pain, numbness, or tingling in your chest, arms, neck, or jaw during sexual activity, stop and call your doctor right away. You could be having a serious side effect of Levitra. Stop using Levitra and get emergency medical help if you have sudden vision loss. Get emergency medical help if you have any of these signs of an allergic reaction: hives; difficulty breathing; swelling of your face, lips, tongue, or throat.

Stop using Levitra and call your doctor at once if you have any of these serious side effects:

  • chest pain or heavy feeling, pain spreading to the arm or shoulder, nausea, sweating, general ill feeling;
  • irregular heartbeat;
  • swelling in your hands, ankles, or feet;
  • shortness of breath;
  • vision changes;
  • feeling light-headed, fainting; or
    penis erection that is painful or lasts 4 hours or longer.

Continue taking this medication and talk with your doctor if you have any of these less serious side effects:

  • warmth or redness in your face, neck, or chest;
  • stuffy nose;
  • headache;
  • upset stomach; or
  • back pain.

Side effects other than those listed here may also occur. Talk to your doctor about any side effect that seems unusual or that is especially bothersome.

What other drugs will affect Levitra?

Before taking Levitra, tell your doctor if you are using any of the following medications:

  • cimetidine (Tagamet, Tagamet HB);
  • erythromycin (E-Mycin, Eryc, Ery-Tab) or clarithromycin (Biaxin);
  • doxazosin (Cardura), prazosin (Minipress), terazosin (Hytrin);
  • HIV medicines such as amprenavir (Agenerase), tipranavir (Aptivus), darunavir (Prezista), efavirenz (Sustiva), nevirapine (Viramune), indinavir (Crixivan), saquinavir (Invirase, Fortovase), lopinavir/ritonavir (Kaletra), fosamprenavir (Lexiva), ritonavir (Norvir), atazanavir (Reyataz), or nelfinavir (Viracept);
  • itraconazole (Sporanox) or ketoconazole (Nizoral);
  • heart rhythm medicine such as amiodarone (Cordarone, Pacerone), quinidine(Quinidex, Quinaglute), procainamide (Procan, Pronestyl), or sotalol (Betapace);
  • carbamazepine (Tegretol), phenobarbital (Luminal), or phenytoin (Dilantin); or
  • rifampin (Rifadin, Rimactane).

If you are using any of these drugs, you may not be able to take Levitra, or you may need dosage adjustments or special tests during treatment.

There may be other drugs not listed that can affect Levitra. Tell your doctor about all the prescription and over-the-counter medications you use. This includes vitamins, minerals, herbal products, and drugs prescribed by other doctors. Do not start using a new medication without telling your doctor.

Hidden dangers of sex pills

Tuesday, November 13th, 2007

Stamina Rx MenHerbal sex-pill alternatives pose a hidden danger for men on common heart and blood-pressure drugs: popping one could lead to a stroke, or even death.

Many of the “all-natural” products with names such as Stamina-RX and Vigor-25 work because they contain unregulated versions of the drugs they are supposed to replace.

An Associated Press investigation found that spiked herbal impotency pills are emerging as a major public-health concern.

Herbal Sex Pills May Pose Hidden Dangers

Many of the pills marketed as safe herbal alternatives to Viagra and other prescription sex medications pose a hidden danger: For men on common heart and blood-pressure drugs, popping one could lead to a stroke, or even death.

“All-natural” products with names like Stamina-RX and Vigor-25 promise an apothecary’s delight of rare Asian ingredients, but many work because they contain unregulated versions of the very pharmaceuticals they are supposed to replace.

That dirty secret represents a special danger for the millions of men who take nitrates — drugs prescribed to lower blood pressure and regulate heart disease. When mixed, nitrates and impotency pharmaceuticals can slow blood flow catastrophically, leading to a heart attack or stroke.

An Associated Press investigation shows that spiked herbal impotency pills are emerging as a major public health concern that officials haven’t figured out how to track, much less tame.

Emergency rooms and poison control hot lines are starting to log more incidents of the long-ignored phenomenon. Sales of “natural sexual enhancers” are booming — rising to nearly $400 million last year. And dangerous knockoffs abound.

At greatest risk are the estimated 5.5 million American men who take nitrates — generally older and more likely to need help with erectile dysfunction.

The all-natural message can be appealing to such men, warned by their doctors and ubiquitous TV commercials not to take Viagra, Cialis or Levitra.

James Neal-Kababick, director of Oregon-based Flora Research Laboratories, said about 90 percent of the hundreds of samples he has analyzed contained forms of patented pharmaceuticals — some with doses more than twice that of prescription erectile dysfunction medicine. Other testers report similar results, particularly among pills that promise immediate results.

While no deaths have been reported, the AP found records of emergency room visits attributed to all-natural sex pills in Georgia, Chicago, Philadelphia, San Diego and elsewhere.

An elderly man in a retirement community north of Los Angeles took an in-the-mail sample and landed in the hospital for four days. A Michigan man sued the maker of Spontane-ES, blaming it for the stroke he suffered 20 minutes after taking a freebie that was advertised as “extremely safe.” Tim Fulmer, a lawyer representing Spontane-ES, said the pill did not contain any pharmaceutical and was not responsible for the stroke.

Mark B. Mycyk, a Chicago emergency room doctor who directs Northwestern University’s clinical toxicology research program, said he is seeing increasing numbers of patients who unwittingly took prescription-strength doses of the alternatives, a trend he attributes to ease of purchase on the Internet and the desperation of vulnerable men. He said he wouldn’t be surprised if there’d been undetected deaths from bad herbal pills.

Some herbal labels warn off users with heart or blood-pressure problems if they have taken their medicine within six hours; some doctors say 24 hours or more would be safer.

The AP often couldn’t determine from records whether incidents reported to tracking systems of the federal Food and Drug Administration and state poison control centers involved mixing herbal alternatives with nitrates.

Some men in their 30s who went to emergency rooms after taking herbal sex pills were presumably otherwise healthy, but they showed the transitory side effects of the active ingredients in regulated impotency pharmaceuticals, such as difficulty seeing clearly or severe headaches, records show.

While public health officials don’t know the extent of the problem, they agree that incidents are vastly underreported, with national tracking systems capturing perhaps as little as 1 percent of them. Victims may be embarrassed, and doctors rarely ask about supplements.

Since 2001, sales of supplements marketed as natural sexual enhancers have risen $100 million, to $398 million last year, including herbal mixtures, according to estimates by Nutrition Business Journal. Some legitimate herbal mixtures claim to work gradually over weeks; it’s the herbals marketed for immediate trysts that often are the problem.

Tight budgets, weak regulations and other priorities limit the FDA’s ability to police the products, often promoted via blasts of e-mail spam and fly-by-night Web sites.

“The Internet poses many enforcement challenges,” said Dr. Linda Silvers, who leads an FDA team that targets fraudulent health products sold online. “A Web site can look sophisticated and legitimate, but actually be an illegal operation.”

In many cases, the ingredients used to alter herbal pills come from Asia, particularly China, where the sexual enhancers are cooked up in labs at the beginning of a winding supply chain. The FDA has placed pills by two manufacturers in China and one from Malaysia on an import watch list.

Pills like Cialis generally retail at pharmacies for between $13 and $20, while herbals can cost less than $1, up to about $5.

Many health insurance plans provide limited coverage for prescription sex pills, especially for those with health-related difficulties. Few over-the-counter treatments are covered, and herbals aren’t likely to be among them, in part because they’re classified as foods not pharmaceuticals, said Mohit M. Ghose, spokesman for America’s Health Insurance Plans, which represents major health insurers.

Spiked pills have turned up in Thailand, Taiwan, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Malaysia, the United Kingdom and the United States, according to testing done by Pfizer Inc., the New York-based pharmaceutical giant that developed Viagra. The company said that 69 percent of 3,400 supplements it purchased in China contained sildenafil citrate, the main ingredient in Viagra. Pfizer didn’t check for the patented ingredients of its rivals.

Under U.S. law, because such pills are “dietary supplements,” they’re far less regulated than pharmaceuticals and face few barriers to market. Viagra, by contrast, underwent years of testing before it was publicly available.

While herbal alternatives often contain exact copies of the patented drugs, some makers tweak the molecules to keep the effect of the original pharmaceutical while avoiding the scrutiny of the FDA and outside testing labs.

Federal officials have only recently stepped up investigations and prosecutions, and in any case, the FDA’s recall power is limited. Last week, in response to safety concerns about imported toothpaste, dog food and toys, President Bush recommended that the FDA be authorized to order mandatory recalls of dangerous products.

Currently, recalls are voluntary, and even if the agency determines that a product poses a “significant health risk,” a firm may refuse to cooperate. Plus, recalled products are widely offered on the Internet and pills are hard to round up.

Before a product called Nasutra was recalled a year ago by its manufacturer, the FDA had received a 30-year-old man’s report of a raging headache and an erection that wouldn’t go down. Following the recall, a 32-year-old man reported having spontaneous nose bleeds after taking the pill, records show.

E-mails requesting comment from Nasutra LLC, the company that voluntarily recalled the product in September 2006, were not returned. The FDA says the firm is located in Los Angeles; there is no listed phone number in the region.

During the past year, the FDA has orchestrated eight recalls of “herbal” pills that contained the ingredients found in Viagra, Cialis or Levitra, or their unregulated chemical cousins. Many of the firms were based around Los Angeles, their offices ranging from an unsigned door in a grungy hall on the fringe of downtown to a gated complex near Beverly Hills.

One recall involved a pill called Liviro3.

The current owner of the drug’s marketing and distributing firm said that after he tried the product, he quit his job at a car dealership and bought the brand name and stock of several thousand pills in 2004 for $450,000. In January, he said, FDA agents seized his stockpile after an agency lab found that Liviro3 contained tadalafil, the main ingredient in Cialis. The man told the AP he’d had no idea the pills were drug-laced.

One prosecution involved V. Vigor Corp., the Long Island-based maker of Vigor-25. While the product was advertised as containing Asian ginseng, lycium fruit and Chinese yam rhizome, FDA testing indicated that the pills contained Viagra.

Company executive Michael Peng had agreed to stop selling Vigor-25 following an FDA agent’s visit in late 2004, according to an arrest warrant affidavit. But between then and his arrest in September, at least 4.5 million pills were packaged for distribution, the affidavit said. According to prosecutors, Peng thought he could evade tests simply by switching from the sildenafil citrate he imported from China to Levitra’s active ingredient, vardenafil — a shipment of which U.S. Customs intercepted from Thailand.

Peng, who said through his attorney that he was “unaware that there was anything other than natural supplements” in Vigor-25, faces a charge of misbranding — in this instance, claiming that a pharmaceutical is a dietary supplement.

Two other pills, Spontane-ES and Stamina-RX, were made by companies run by Jared Wheat, who’s facing federal charges in Atlanta that he peddled knockoff pharmaceuticals cooked in a Central American lab. Prosecutors tried to keep Wheat from posting bail by asserting that he contemplated killing an FDA investigator and bribing a prosecutor.

Fulmer rejected those assertions, which did not lead to charges, saying Wheat is hardworking and nonviolent. Fulmer said Wheat’s two businesses are legitimate and continue to be successful.

Wheat was granted bond after pledging approximately $7.5 million in cash and property; he’s free under home confinement.