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Spinal cord injury no bar to intimacy
Medicine: Viagra, Levitra revive sexual joys despite paralysis.
By Tracy Manzer
Staff writer
LONG BEACH -- Described as one of the most devastating events in a person's
life, spinal cord injuries are sudden and catastrophic and can transform
a strong, healthy person into someone completely helpless.
The lifetime of physical, emotional and economic effects of such trauma
has a tremendous impact on the person, his or her career, self-image and
personal relationships.
Recent developments in treatment and rehabilitation of spinal cord injuries
have made huge progress in lifespans of patients and their ability to
function independently. Until the last few decades, most people suffering
such injuries did not survive, and if they did, their conditions were
considered untreatable.
And until the late 1990s, the inability to enjoy intimate relationships
was a fate many paraplegics and quadriplegics were destined to suffer
with, often in silence.
Then came Viagra.
Taken every eight seconds in the United States, the erectile dysfunction
drug has been used to help the clinically depressed, those with heart
disease and diabetes, and prostate cancer patients, to name a few.
It and a new drug on the market Levitra have also seen astounding success
in the population with spinal cord injuries. Paraplegic and quadriplegic
patients are the fourth-most-likely group to be prescribed either drug.
"It seems to work better with my spinal cord patients than any other
population,' said Dr. Barton Wachs, a Long Beach urologist who specializes
in erectile dysfunction and who says the medications work with 90 percent
of his spinal cord injury patients.
Both drugs work on the same principle. Viagra was first on scene, and
because of this, will likely remain the popular favorite, Wachs said.
But Levitra, which last month was cleared by the Federal Drug Administration
for widespread use in the United States, still has a large market on which
to capitalize.
Wachs had more than 30 spinal cord patients enrolled in the final phase
of the clinical study of Levitra, and was the only Southern Californian
physician to participate in the extensive study.
Like Viagra, the drug lasts about four hours. Viagra takes about an hour
to take effect, Wachs said. Levitra starts working 15 to 20 minutes faster
than Viagra and it provides a stronger dose.
For Levitra and Viagra to work, the patient has to have sexual stimulation.
"For some, it's visual, for others it's in the brain,' he said.
"Some need physical contact' for the drug to work.
There are a few, rare side effects. Fewer than 30 percent of patients
reported getting headaches. An even smaller number complained of facial
flushing, Wachs said.
Because there has been no direct study comparing the two drugs, at least
not yet, it isn't known if the stronger dose will see better results.
But, "there is virtually no downside,' the physician said from his
office on Atlantic Avenue. "Oral treatments are great for all men,
but it's especially nice for the spinal cord population.'
That is because 82 percent of spinal cord injuries in the United States
occur in men ages 16 to 30. For young men, the issue of intimacy is one
that can have a profound and debilitating impact on their quality of life.
It certainly is not an easy problem for 27-year-old Long Beach resident
Kevin Conrad to discuss.
Conrad was 23 when he became paralyzed in a hit-and-run accident while
riding his motorcycle on the freeway.
More active now than before the crash, Conrad competes in basketball
and tennis and surfs. He recently filmed an episode of Fox-TV's "Malcolm
in the Middle,' which will air Nov. 16.
But no matter how fit or active he was, enjoying regular intercourse
was difficult.
Both drugs work best for patients paralyzed at the 12th thoracic vertebra
down, or the lower back. Although Conrad suffered his injuries higher
up the spine in his first, second and third thoracic vertebrae he has
still had great results with the new medication.
The drug cannot restore sensation to the penis, but Conrad can enjoy
physical intimacy and can experience orgasm. While sex does not feel exactly
as it did prior to his accident in 1999, Conrad said it is great to just
know he can engage in intimacy again.
And although he was somewhat reticent when talking about his personal
experience with Levitra, Conrad came alive when asked if any of his friends
had expressed interest in the drug since his participation in the trial.
"Oh yeah,' he grinned. "All my friends were coming up to me
asking me 'What's that doctor's name? Do you have his phone number?''
He agreed to the interview because he said he felt it was more important
to help other spinal cord injury patients realize there is hope.
"Anything I can do to help someone else, I will,' he said. "It's
hard to talk about, no one likes to talk about it. But it's important.'
Wachs agreed.
"Most of these guys are young guys. One day they are completely
healthy, the next day they find themselves unable to move,' Wachs said.
"It has a devastating impact, to feel like you're no longer an independent
man. And when you're young, sex is still a very important part of that
feeling.'
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