Showing posts with label Viagra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Viagra. Show all posts

Friday, July 27, 2012

Sex toys, aphrodisiacs: Profits rise as condom shops expand range of products

salesman at a Ho Chi Minh City condom shop holds forth on an aphrodisiac made in India to a customer
A man steps into a condom shop in Ho Chi Minh City and, without a murmur, coughs up US$100 for a vibrator.
This is becoming an increasingly common sight in the city, as more condom shops have begun to sell sex toys and aphrodisiacs on the side.
The problem is they are unauthorized, smuggled from overseas through dealers.
“If a shop only sells condoms, it will definitely make losses,” Tuoi Tre quoted the owner of HT shop on Ten Lua Street, Binh Tan District, as saying.
"Condom shops these days sell all kinds of toys."
A man known only as Ngoc, a distributor of condoms and other products, said: “It costs VND20-30 million (US$960-1,440) to open a condom shop. But if you can cleverly add other products, you just need two generous customers a day to earn millions of dongs.”
Tuoi Tre reporters, who went to many condom shops pretending to be looking for jobs, found that some made profits of dozens of million dongs a month.
Most shops mark up the prices of the toys and other stuff by up to seven or eight times.
For instance, they buy Viagra at VND35,000 ($1.68) for a pack of four capsules and sell to customers at VND220,000 ($10).
Pham Kim Binh, chief inspector at the city Department of Health, said aphrodisiacs and erectile dysfunction drugs have to be prescribed by doctors while their distributors must get licenses from the Ministry of Health.
But the lure of massive profits has seen many people open condom shops.
Tuan, the owner of a shop on Pham The Hien Street, District 8, said the shop usually has its doors open only a fraction when there are customers so that they do not worry about being spotted by someone.
Ngoc, the distributor, suggests to shop keepers that they should only display products meant for external use since they attract lighter penalties if detected by authorities.
“But products that have to be consumed can expose the sellers to severe punishment and so should be hidden away,” he said.
The shops mostly get customers between 8 p.m. and 11 p.m., with few turning up during the day. Some are in their 60s and 70s.
Truong, another distributor, said most products are smuggled from China and Malaysia, and dealers are not clear about their origins themselves.
“Customers should be lucky to get a good product. I just hope they don’t pose a threat to their life."
A shop owner admitted candidly that most aphrodisiacs for women have little effect. “But the customers just have to put up with it. They can’t make a fuss since it is just embarrassing for them [to be buying the stuff].”
The profits and demand mean the sex toys business is in robust health. The only annoyance is the occasional police bust like the one on May 24 when a truck was caught unloading several vibrators and aphrodisiacs in District 6

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Could Chinese Herb Be a Natural Viagra? - MSN Health & Fitness

Could Chinese Herb Be a Natural Viagra?

Early research suggests 'horny goat weed' might help men with impotence

By Amanda Gardner, HealthDay Reporter
Early research suggests 'horny goat weed' might help men with impotence.

FRIDAY, Oct. 3 (HealthDay News) -- A Chinese herbal remedy known as "horny goat weed" may indeed live up to its name as a natural version of Viagra.

Italian researchers report that laboratory studies show that the compound has the potential to treat erectile dysfunction, and possibly with fewer side effects than its pharmaceutical cousin.

"No in-vivo studies in an animal model have been performed at this regard, so a lot of work must be done. We would like to test in vivo [with animals] the molecule to understand if it really works in humans," said study lead author Mario Dell'Agli, of the University of Milan's laboratory of pharmacognosy. "At this stage of the research, we cannot say if the molecule we have synthesized possesses less side effects with respect to Viagra. However, this derivative seems to be in vitro [in lab tests] more selective than Viagra, because it targets [an enzyme involved in blood flow to the penis] more precisely."

The study was expected to be published in the Oct. 24 issue of the Journal of Natural Products, a publication of the American Chemical Society.

Viagra (sildenafil) is one of several prescription medications available and widely prescribed for erectile dysfunction, a condition that affects an estimated 18 million men in the United States. Viagra and other drugs like it can cause side effects such as headache, stomach problems and visual disturbances.

Horny goat weed, hailing primarily from southern China, has a long history as an aphrodisiac.

As part of a new screening program to find natural alternatives to Viagra, the study authors analyzed a number of herbal extracts long used for male impotence, including Ferula hermonis or Lebanese Viagra; Cinnamomum cassia or Chinese cinnamon; as well as Epimedium brevicornum aka horny goat weed. All three extracts are reputed to improve sexual performance.

The main active component of each extract was tested against an enzyme known as phosphodiesterase-5A1 (PDE5A1), which regulates blood supply to the penis. Inhibition of this enzyme results in more blood flow to the penis, resulting in an erection.

Icariin, the active ingredient of horny goat weed, inhibited PDE5A1 to a greater degree than the other compounds tested.

"The novelty of this work is the new molecule we have synthesized by icariin," Dell'Agli said. "It is derived by chemical modifications of the structure of icariin, which is the active ingredient purified from E. brevicornum (horny goat weed). The mechanism by which the molecule we have found might work in humans is the inhibition of phosphodiesterase 5 (PDE 5) in the corpus cavernosum [erectile tissue in the penis], which is the mechanism by which Viagra works. This is an in vitro study. It can be considered a pre-clinical study."

More information

The National Institutes of Health has more on erectile dysfunction.

SOURCES: Mario Dell'Agli, Ph.D., laboratory of pharmacognosy, University of Milan, Italy; Oct. 24, 2008, Journal of Natural Products