What People Are Getting Wrong This Week: Gas Station ‘Male Enhancement’ Pills ...Middle East

News by : (Live Hacker) -

If you're like me, you've seen these pills and thought, "These would never work." Well, my skeptical friend, this week we are the ones who are wrong. Gas station boner pills often work exactly as expected—but this isn't because herbal ingredients like ginseng and Yohimbe bark are miracle cures for ED. It's because many of these pills are basically mislabeled Viagra or Cialis. It's true: The Food and Drug Administration has found all kinds of prescription medication in hundreds of different shady "supplements," but you can still buy them. You shouldn't, but you can.

Unlike prescription and over-the-counter drugs, dietary supplements don’t have to be tested by the Food and Drug Administration before they're sold, so anyone who wants to make a quick buck can fill some capsules with dried grass, call it a supplement, and start selling it.

To its credit, the FDA steps in frequently. The agency maintains an ever-updated database of problematic "Sexual Enhancement and Energy Products," where you can read all about the illicit ingredients in supplements like Green Lumber (contains tadalafil, the active ingredient in Cialis), HimGo (contains sildenafil, the active ingredient in Viagra, and diclofenac, an over-the-counter anti-inflammatory drug), and "Versace Real Honey" (sildenafil, tadalafil, and acetaminophen). The FDA even prosecutes people occasionally for selling this stuff, like Jacksonville "business executive" Jae Hong Kim who recently pled guilty to selling prescription drugs marketed as “Rhino 69” and “MegaZen Power 5000.”

Why you should not take male "enhancement" products from gas stations

You shouldn't take erection pills from a gas station; first, because you don't need to be enhanced; you're beautiful how you are, King. But if you're treating erectile dysfunction, you can do better than a shady supplement. Taking strange pills from a gas station is a bad idea for a lot of reasons, including:

Dangerous interactions: If you’re on heart meds, blood pressure drugs, or nitrates, ED drugs are generally not safe. For that matter, if you're on any drug they're generally not safe, because literally any drug could be in them.

Instead of confiding in the guy behind the counter at your local head shop, talk to your doctor. They have heard it before, and the prices of real-deal E.D. are usually better than the gas station equivalent. It's $2 to $10 per pill for generic sildenafil (Viagra) and about $6 to $18 per pill for generic tadalafil (Cialis), where gas station drugs can cost as much as $20 per dose.

Why they still sell

So these pills are dangerous, expensive, and shady, and the FDA constantly warns us not to take them. Why are they still everywhere? First because the minimal oversight of dietary supplements has been baked into law since the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA) passed in 1994. But also because these pills offer both an easy solution and an illicit thrill. The combination of curiosity, desperation, and sheepishness makes those shiny packages by the slushie machine an irresistible impulse purchase to some, especially people who are too shy to discuss medical issues with their doctors. So they keep selling because impulse, embarrassment, and weak regulation all collide, and the result is a product that’s as easy to get as it is risky to take.

Hence then, the article about what people are getting wrong this week gas station male enhancement pills was published today ( ) and is available on Live Hacker ( Middle East ) The editorial team at PressBee has edited and verified it, and it may have been modified, fully republished, or quoted. You can read and follow the updates of this news or article from its original source.

Read More Details
Finally We wish PressBee provided you with enough information of ( What People Are Getting Wrong This Week: Gas Station ‘Male Enhancement’ Pills )

Last updated :

Also on site :

Most Viewed News
جديد الاخبار