Men's Health Miracle Run - August 17, 2008
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As luck (or is it Miracle?) would have it, this run was scheduled before a holiday so there is one extra day of rest for those who woke up early for this race (and another extra day of rest if you are from Quezon City). Things work out fine for me this time around in terms of preparations: my alarm went off right on time and I got to the Fort Bonifacio area about 10 minutes before the gun was fired, which was enough time for some last minute stretching. Too bad all of my running buddies missed out on this event (Kervin, Per, Janine+, Jeanne: I know you all woke up late! haha! kidding! :)). Nearly all of my siblings registered for this event so I wasn't alone in this race (and lead to a new meaning for the term "sibling rivalry" race-wise as we all try to out-do each other).

It was hot by the time the race started at 6:30AM so my goal was try and finish it as quick as possible before it gets hotter. From the looks of it, it doesn't seem to have reached the 1,000 runners target that Men's Health had but being good sport that they are, they decided that instead of donating Php 200 for each runner who finished the race, they will instead put in Php 400 per person, on top of Php 200,000 donation to charity if everyone finishes it.


The race course was relatively flat most of the way and takes about two 5KM loops in order to finish it. There were ample water stations, which also offered bottled multi-colored and multi-flavored Gatorade to all the runners. It was such a sugar buffet for me that I fear I may have drunk more calories than I burned. Ended up skipping two water stations as got too bloated already.


I ran most of the way with very little walking but dismayed at the finish line and upon checking my Nike+ sportsband and seeing I still breached the 1hour mark. Weird though that my official time on race was about 58 minutes and 35 seconds. I let this discrepancy go but then my sisters also informed me of delay in Men's Health timer! Oh man, I guess there is no such luck in my under one hour target for this. Maybe on the next race.. On a good side, my Nike+ sportsband finally registered a near accurate distance of 10.1km so felt quite happy with that.



Took some pictures afterward and hung out at the Nike+ booth afterwards with friends and family.
The boys getting a photo together..

Not to be undone, the girls also took a photo of their own.


We made amends and did a group shot. haha


Shot taken with "Fast and the Furious" Coach Rio




Men's Health awarding stage with Timer (last count at 6,600 km)

The big check for the big money. All going for a good cause. Very Big of Men's Health for that!

Women May Get Sex Pills, Too
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http://static.thefrisky.com/images/uploads/bc_pills_sex_c.jpg
The same little blue pills that can help men get in the mood for love could be remade into little pink pills that do the same thing for women, scientists now suggest.

Although evidence that significant advances have been made into drugs that help treat male sexual dysfunction can be seen in everything from television commercials to Internet spam, much less progress has been made when it comes to female sexual dysfunction.

"We were doing a fair amount of work on erectile dysfunction in men, and during lab meetings the question came up of why we were just talking about the male side, and were we not foolish to not also think about the female side," said researcher Kyan Allahdadi, a vascular physiologist at the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta. Past research suggests "between 40 to 60 percent of women complain of some sexual dysfunction," he added.

There have been attempts at drug treatments for female sexual dysfunctions, including hormone therapies. Even caffeine has been shown to motivate female rats to have more frequent sex. However, Allahdadi explained that none have completed U.S. Food and Drug Administration clinical trials yet.

Now researchers suggest that medicines employed for male sexual dysfunctions could someday address some forms of female sexual dysfunction as well.

Male erectile dysfunction is often due to inadequate blood flow to the genitals, something that drugs for it seek to boost. It turns out that female sexual dysfunction may at times have the same roots, and thus also be treated with erectile dysfunction medicines.

Erectile dysfunction drugs such as such as Viagra (sildenafil), Levitra (vardenafil) and online pharmacy (tadalafil) work by inhibiting a molecule known as PDE5. Doing so dilates blood vessels and enhances blood flow.

Allahdadi and his colleagues tested such PDE5 inhibitors on 10 male and 12 female rats. They focused on their internal pudendal arteries, which supply blood to the penis in male rats and to the vagina and clitoris in female rats. (The same arteries in humans provide the same functions for us.)

The researchers found that sildenafil, vardenafil and tadalafil could all dilate female and male rat internal pudendal arteries. Although the male arteries reacted more effectively to vardenafil, the female arteries responded more strongly to sildenafil.

There have been trials of Viagra in women, but these have proved highly disappointing. "Our findings suggest that what works in males might not work the same way in females," Allahdadi said. "Future research designed for females could come up with a therapy that does work."

Although such research into sexual dysfunctions could help people have more sex, Allahdadi explained that sexual dysfunctions are often linked with more serious conditions such as cardiovascular disease and diabetes. "So further investigations into this could open a window into cardiovascular health as well," he said.

"We're just getting started in this," Allahdadi added. "It's pretty exciting. There's a great need in the population. I think it's going to become a pretty hot topic."

Allahdadi and his colleagues will present their findings at the Experimental Biology 2009 conference on April 20.

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German drugmaker stopped developing "pink Viagra"
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German drugmaker Boehringer Ingelheim has stopped developing a drug dubbed the "pink Viagra" after failing to convince U.S. regulators the experimental pill could boost women's sex drive.



(A worker is seen at a Boehringer Ingelheim research facility in Vienna, Austra in a handout photo. )



"The decision was not made lightly, considering the advanced stage of development," chief executive Andreas Barner said on Friday of the hoped-for moneyspinner aimed at premenopausal women with a persistent and unexplained lack of sex drive.



Boehringer's move marked the failure of the latest attempt to find a female counterpart to Pfizer's cheap viagra, the blockbuster blue pill for men. Drugmakers have tested various ways to boost female libido, but women's sex lives have proved difficult to target with medication.



U.S. government advisers said in June that Boehringer's pink pill, based on the active ingredient flibanserin, offered little help to women and had unacceptable risks -- nearly 15 percent of women stopped taking a pill before a study ended due to side effects including depression, fainting and fatigue.



That led the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to ask unlisted Boehringer in August for more information on flibanserin, which would have been marketed as Girosa.



"The response of the authorities and the complexity and extent of further questions that would need to be addressed to potentially obtain registration for flibanserin have impacted the company's decision to focus on other pipeline projects," Boehringer said.



Drugmakers have been searching for a medicine to improve women's sex lives since Viagra's debut 12 years ago. The market for a "pink Viagra" could stretch into the billions of dollars.



NO MEDICINE FOR LIBIDO



Originally developed as an antidepressant, flibanserin was believed to act on brain chemicals that play a role in sexual response. But, in trials, women on the once-a-day pill, taken at bedtime reported unwanted side effects.



An FDA advisory committee voted 11-0 in June that the drug's risks and benefits were unacceptable and 10-1 that effectiveness data was lacking.



Boehringer, a 125-year-old company controlled by great-grandchildren of the company's founder, said it would now merely complete the two most advanced drug trials.



Male impotence pills including cialis work by widening blood vessels to increase the blood flow needed for an erection. Pfizer dropped tests of Viagra in females in 2004 after studies failed to show it helped women.



The flibanserin setback was in contrast to Boehringer's success in pioneering a new blood thinning pill for a market that rival Bayer said could be worth $15 billion.



A U.S. advisory panel last month recommend clearance of Boehringer's Pradaxa pill for preventing strokes in patients with a type of irregular heart beat.





Reuters

T-Mobile to offer two tablets
[info]qehadish
T-Mobile announced at CES that they will have two cialis. The first is the LG G-Slate which will run Android 3.0 (Honeycomb) which is built just for tablets. The second is the Dell Streak 7. It is similar to the Dell Streak but has a larger display and upgrated features. Both will run T-Mobile's 4G network.

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