Could Viagra Make You Go Blind?!?!?!?!

taoist

The Sage
Forum Member
Feds Eye Viagra-Blindness Reports

Small Number Of Viagra Users Going Blind

May 27, 2005 9:40 am US/Central
WASHINGTON (CBS) Federal health investigators are looking into reports that some men who used Viagra may have suffered a new and very serious side effect -- blindness.

Twenty-three million men worldwide have used Viagra. A very small number of them are going blind after taking normal doses. And CBS News has learned from the FDA that it is urgently meeting about it with experts and Pfizer.

Jimmy Grant started using Viagra in 1998, when he was 57. At first, he felt pressure in his temples and saw color changes in his vision.

"I noticed the symptoms probably within 45 minutes to an hour," he told CBS News correspondent Sharyl Attkisson.

Soon, he went blind in his right eye. Doctors didn't make a connection to Viagra.

"After your loss of vision, did you continue taking doses?" Attkisson asked.

"On occasions, I did," he said. "And then in March 2000 after taking Viagra I experienced loss of sight -- partial loss of sight in my left eye."

With both eyes damaged, a friend found an article on the Internet about Viagra and blindness, and Grant put two-and-two together.

"What convinced me that Viagra did it was what Dr. Pomeranz had in his report."

That's Dr. Howard Pomeranz, an eye specialist who appears to be the first doctor to make a connection in one of his patients back in '98. To him, it made sense that Viagra -- which alters blood flow in key parts of the body -- could also affect circulation to the optic nerve.

"And so I thought, well, in both of these situations, blood flow is being altered, so maybe there is a connection between the two," said the University of Minnesota neuro-ophthalmologist.

He published his patient's case looking for feedback. By 2001, he had five cases to report to the FDA and Pfizer, the makers of Viagra. Slowly, more reports trickled in.

"So they certainly are aware of this possible side effect of their medication," Pomeranz said.

The FDA tells CBS News it's looking at about 50 reported cases of vision loss and, while no direct link has been proven, an FDA medical supervisor says "We're very concerned. This issue is front and center, it's a priority. We know people need to know as promptly as possible."

Pfizer told us its Viagra studies show no report of vision loss and say there is no more evidence of vision loss in men taking Viagra than those who don't. However Pfizer confirmed it in in discussions with the FDA to update the labels to reflect the rare occurrences.

Jimmy Grant is now spending retirement in a way he never imagined: living with his 83-year-old mother, suing Pfizer, and sorry he ever tried Viagra.

"I've pretty much accepted that my eyesight is not going to come back. But I've also pretty much accepted that Viagra done it," he said.

The FDA says it's monitoring adverse event reports for the similar drugs in the same class as well.

Pfizer Statement Regarding Viagra:

A review of 103 Viagra clinical trials involving 13,000 patients found no reports of non-arteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (NAION). Outside of clinical trials, Viagra has been used by more than 23 million men worldwide over the past seven years and reports of visual field loss due to NAION are extremely rare.

There is no evidence showing that NAION occurred more frequently in men taking Viagra than men of similar age and health who did not take Viagra.

NAION is the most common acute optic nerve disease in adults over age 50 and it shares a number of common risk factors with erectile dysfunction: age over 50, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes. Most of the reported cases in which NAION has occurred in men taking Viagra have involved patients with underlying anatomic or vascular risk factors associated with the development of NAION. This makes it impossible to determine whether these events are caused by the patient?s underlying vascular risk factors, anatomical defects, Viagra or a combination of these factors -- or to other factors.

Pfizer is in discussions with the Food and Drug Administration to update the Viagra label to reflect these rare ocular occurrences. Viagra has a strong safety profile and remains an effective medication that benefits millions of patients.


:scared :scared

...good thing that I've never needed that stuff!!! :)
 

vinnie

la vita ? buona
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If your taking viagra in most cases your better off not see what you fvcking anyway :mj07:
 

vinnie

la vita ? buona
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GM said:
So it turns out too much sex really CAN make you go blind!!


only the kind your thinking of :mj07:if that's what you call it :scared
 

AR182

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Nov 9, 2000
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Viagra Unfairly Drawn Into Drug Safety Witchhunt

Viagra Unfairly Drawn Into Drug Safety Witchhunt

Matthew Herper, 05.27.05, 3:40 PM ET

Headlines saying that Viagra may cause blindness are attention-getting--and they seem to be hurting Pfizer's stock. But luckily for patients and drug companies alike, the data supporting a link between the impotence drug and a loss of sight are weak at best.

The condition at issue is a disease called nonarteric anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (NAION). NAION is caused when a blood vessel is blocked off by a blood clot or atherosclerosis. Similar problems elsewhere in the body lead to heart attacks and strokes. But when the blood vessel leads to the optic nerve, vision loss or blindness in the eye can be the result. Viagra can also lead to blue-colored vision because it blocks an enzyme in the retina.

Patients with heart disease and diabetes are at higher risk for NAION. They are also at higher risk for erectile dysfunction, which, like heart disease, is caused in part by deteriorating blood vessels. So far, among the 23 million men worldwide who have taken Viagra, the FDA has received only 50 or so case reports about the drug causing NAION. Without more data, linking Viagra directly to blindness is a huge leap.

"Association does not imply causality," says Andrew McCullough, director of sexual health and male infertility at New York University Medical Center. "That's why you do placebo-controlled trials." He says blaming vision loss on Viagra is a lot like previous assertions that the drug caused heart attacks. It was not Viagra, he argues, but the exertion of sexual activity.

An account of seven new cases of NAION in patients who had recently taken Viagra were published recently in the Journal of Neurological Ophthalmology, apparently kick-starting the current discussion. In that account, Howard Pomeranz of the University of Minnesota Medical School also noted seven other cases that had previously been mentioned in the medical literature. In the paper, he writes that the cases seemed to occur shortly after Viagra was taken. Pomeranz did not return a request for comment.

But such case reports are usually seen by doctors as merely guidance to decide what they should study. In 103 Viagra clinical trials and seven years of use, only a few dozen cases of NAION seem to have emerged. Cialis, from Eli Lilly (nyse: LLY - news - people ) and Icos (nasdaq: ICOS - news - people ), also seems to have few cases, while Levitra, from Bayer (nyse: BAY - news - people ) and Schering-Plough (nyse: SGP - news - people ), has had none. (Levitra has been prescribed less frequently than either of the other two drugs.)

The news that the Food and Drug Administration is looking into reports of NAION shouldn't be alarming to investors. That's what the FDA does. (The FDA did not return requests for comment.) Even if a note that blindness has occurred in rare cases appears on Viagra's label, it is unlikely to hurt the product's sales.

Norman Saffra, director of ophthalmology at Maimonides Medical Center in New York, pointed out that all medicines have risks associated with them, and that this appeared to be rather rare. "You've got to remember that sexual activity itself has a risk of death in patients with advanced heart disease!" he says. "This is a discussion patients have to have with their physicians. It's an individual decision between every patient and their physician and their partner."
 

gardenweasel

el guapo
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Jan 10, 2002
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"the bunker"
my grandfather`s in his 80`s......and has been using viagra for years.....

and,he still doesn`t need glasses....

he drinks right out of the bottle....
 
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