Cialis was launched in the market for the treatment of erectile dysfunction; Cialis came out as the wonder drug for ED patients. Cialis contains Tadalafill which acts as the smoothing agent inside the penile arteries and increases the level of blood flow into the penis. Cialis is considered as better performer than the other ED medications. Cialis works for longer period of time; it remains active for 36 hours even after the sexual intercourse
Cialis is the oral method of medication and should be taken after the proper consult of the doctors. Cialis is approved and manufactured under the guidelines of FDA; therefore its dose can be safely used. Cialis may work slowly after heavy meal, but its dose can be taken with or without food. Cialis is supposed to be the direct competitor of Viagra drugs as its use is far more than Viagra. Some of the common side effects after the dose of Cialis are headache, stomachache, flushing, nasal congestion and irritation in some of the cases.
Verbal Abuse In Childhood Triggers Adult Anxiety, Depression
A new study by Florida State University researchers has found that people who were verbally abused as children grow up to be self-critical adults prone to depression and anxiety. People who were verbally abused had 1.6 times as many symptoms of depression and anxiety as those who had not been verbally abused and were twice as likely to have suffered a mood or anxiety disorder over their lifetime, according to psychology Professor Natalie Sachs-Ericsson, the study's lead author. [click link for full article]
Just Like Us, Social Stress Prompts Hamsters To Overeat, Gain Weight
Put a mouse or a rat under stress and what does it do? It stops eating. Humans should be so lucky. When people suffer nontraumatic stress they often head for the refrigerator, producing unhealthy extra pounds.When Syrian hamsters, which are normally solitary, are placed in a group-living situation, they also gain weight. So scientists at the Center for Behavioral Neuroscience at Georgia State University are using hamsters as a model for human stress-induced obesity. [click link for full article]
Very Few Combat Stress Vets Referred For Treatment Or Evaluation
According to a new study by the US Government Accountability Office (GAO), only about 22% of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans with symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) are ever referred for treatment or evaluation. Of 9,145 interviewed veterans who were considered at risk of suffering from PTSD, only 2,029 were referred for treatment or further evaluation. [click link for full article]