Generic Female Viagra Review



Yes, yes, yes! We’ve tried female ‘Viagra’
Coming soon. pink version of the little blue pill.
IT HAS been a long time, ahem, coming but a little pink pill promising women sexual satisfaction is almost here.
This autumn, a prescription-only “female Viagra”, Flibanserin, is being launched in America, following its approval by the tough Food and Drug Administration council.
And it won’t be long until it arrives in the UK – Viagra itself, took just a year to cross the Atlantic after its Stateside release in 1998.
It is anticipated the global market for Flibanserin, to be sold as Addyi, and a rival brand Bremelanotide, will be worth £1billion and £1.3billion a year, respectively.
Female Viagra-type supplements have been available on the internet for more than a decade, but this one claims to really hit the G-spot.
The pill works by stimulating arousal in neuro-transmitters in the brain, rather than controlling blood flow to the genitalia, as Viagra does.
It promises paradise, but will it be a big anti-climax?
Here, four women who have all tried a form of female Viagra talk about what it did for them.
‘I could achieve multiple orgasms and they were really intense’
MUM-of-two Louise Van Der Velde, 41, runs a relationship therapy business and divides her time between her homes in Ascot, Berks, and Spain. Louise, who is widowed, says:
‘I was the first woman in the UK to take Viagra. My late husband, Stephen McEwen, was a doctor and I took it under his supervision as he monitored my blood pressure.
I took a Viagra-based supplement pretty regularly for about six months, two or three times a week, and found it had an incredible effect on my orgasms. They were much more intense and I could achieve them over and over again.
There’s no doubt Viagra really does work for women as it does for men, but the downside is it can give you fairly bad headaches.
Also I do not think it does you much good if you take it long-term.
Perhaps this new drug will be different, but I think any drug that affects the body in this way – either through neurotransmitters in the brain or by affecting blood flow – will have an effect on the body.
I doubt I would take the new pill when it becomes available in Britain because there are far more effective ways of channelling and heightening your sexual energy.
I am now a Tantra teacher, and I believe it is possible to achieve arousal through breathing exercises and mind control.
It’s accepted that most women’s orgasms occur in the brain, so mind control is very important.
There are also various forms of movements you can do, such as yoga, to channel blood flow into the pelvic area and increase arousal.
Taking a form of female Viagra kickstarted me on a fascinating journey to find out how women can become multi-orgasmic and I now work with a lot of women who have sexual problems.
This new pill could help some, but I think we should look to natural remedies first and foremost, and I still have concerns about the side effects of a chemical pill. There’s also the risk of becoming dependent on a pill to have an orgasm.’
‘Always up for something that’ll improve our great sex life’
FILM extra Thorn Hopden, 28, lives in Ramsgate, Kent, with her long-term partner Les, 33, who works in the building trade. She says:
‘I am a very highly-sexed person and although Les and I have a great sex life, I am always up for trying something new that might improve it further.
I started taking a form of female Viagra about two years ago.
Les got some pills from his friend, who had bought them on the internet. He took a blue pill, the male form of sildenafil – which is the generic name for Viagra – I took the pink pill, the female version.
The first time we tried it I’d been drinking spirits and I didn’t feel much of an effect. But the second time it was absolutely amazing.
I felt as if I could go on forever and I had the most intense orgasm of my life. I didn’t have any side effects at all, and I thought it was brilliant.
Les said it was great for him too.
Neither Les nor I actually needed to take it because we don’t have any kind of sexual dysfunction, but we thought it would be a laugh and it definitely worked for us.
I would be happy to try out this new pill Flibanserin when it becomes available on the market in the UK, because anything that enhances your sex life has to be a good thing.
It’s about time there was a proper form of Viagra available on the market for women because so many men – including young men – now take Viagra.
I think a lot of people take it for a laugh, but it has a serious medical effect too.
Now women will have equality and be able to get hold of the medically-tested brand, rather than just buying supplements on the internet.’
‘Lost libido after birth of our daughter’
MARRIED mum of two Amber Jefferies, 34, runs a cleaning business. She lives in Norfolk with her husband Nick, 48, an engineer, their two-year-old daughter Ruby, and Scarlet, 15, Amber’s daughter from a previous marriage. She says:
‘I took the female Viagra supplement Gold soon after Ruby was born. I’d totally lost my libido and we really needed to try something to get our sex life back on track.
I bought it from a website and had high hopes it was going to be the cure.
We even booked a night away in a hotel, and all our plans were laid for a night of sexy bliss. I took the supplement – but nothing happened.
I had taken it in pure desperation but I didn’t feel anything at all. Nick also took the supplement and he didn’t get a reaction, but then he wasn’t in need of it like me. It was so disappointing. If this new drug proves to be far more effective, then I will happily give it a go.
I am currently seeing a sex counsellor and I’ve had hormone tests and all kinds of check-ups to try to discover why I am suffering from sexual dysfunction.
My counsellor thinks it is all in the mind and was caused by Ruby’s birth – Nick was away working when I was pregnant and even missed the birth.
Somehow, since the birth my libido has been effectively switched off and it is causing so many difficulties between us.
No matter how much I reassure him, Nick seems to think that it is somehow his fault. But I know it’s caused by the trauma of my pregnancy and birth.
I’m delighted that finally a proper drug is being licensed which will help women like me.’
‘I didn’t want to fake it at swingers’ parties’
HOUSING officer Louise Alderson, 39, lives in Wakefield, West Yorks. She says:
‘A few years ago I took a generic form of female Viagra on a pretty regular basis. My then partner and I loved to attend swinging parties and I’d take it to make sure I had an orgasm.
I once had three orgasms in two hours, when I was taking it at a swingers’ house party.
I took it once or twice a week for two years, and it had a dramatic effect on my sexual response. I am diabetic, and that can affect my ability to have an orgasm because you have less blood flow all around the body, including to the genitalia. Fluctuating sugar levels can also affect sexual response.
Sometimes I’d struggle to feel aroused, and there’s no point taking part in a swingers’ sex party if you can’t have an orgasm. I would make love with both men and women, and have the most fantastic time.
Most swingers are lovely people, the parties I have been to are not seedy at all.
Viagra means your orgasm is more intense and lasts longer. It also means you can recover more quickly then go again. I had the best orgasms of my life taking the Viagra supplement.
I never wanted to fake an orgasm and it meant I didn’t have to. The only side effect I got was a dry mouth.
It works very quickly and you start to feel very horny and much more touch-sensitive in the areas that matter. The effect was amazing, I loved it.
So I’m delighted Flibanserin has been regulated by the FDA.
I’m in a long-term relationship now and don’t need it, but I’d take it again if necessary.’
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