Levitra
Levitra (vardenafil) gives every man taking it the possibility to achieve and maintain an erection that would be hard enough to have sex. Once the sexual intercourse is over, the erection usually goes away. If your erection does not go away and is painful, you may be having a very rare but dangerous side effect - priapism. If you do not seek emergency medical assistance, this may result in a permanent damage to the tissues of your penis. Levitra is not supposed to be taken by people who have contraindications (allergies, a history of eye diseases, a history of priapism etc) and should never be combined with nitrate drugs used for the treatment of chest pain, as this may result in fainting, coma and even death. Other drugs that should not be combined with Levitra without our doctor's consent include, but are not limited to: phenobarbital, quinidine, alpha blockers, high blood pressure medications, antifungals, irregular heartbeat drugs, amiodarone, phenytoin, metronidazole, HIV protease inhibitors, isoniazid, paroxetine, erectile dysfunction medicines, rifabutin, and lovastatin. If you are going to take any of these medications, this is possible, but either your dose of Levitra will need to increased or decreased, or your health care provider will be monitoring you more carefully for serious side effects.


