| Don’t
let me down
A trio of pills — Cialis, Levitra and Viagra —
enable limp partiers to have stiffer sex, but health researchers
warn of possible side effects
By CHRISTOPHER SEELY
In gay dance events and circuit parties, gay men and recreational
drug use sometimes go hand-in-hand. And since its introduction
in 1998, Viagra — and now its two rivals, Levitra and
Cialis — has found a home among gay men looking to stay
sexually potent for hours on end and party-goers looking to
counteract the side-effects
of drugs like crystal meth.
But it doesn’t stop with recreational use: Some men
with HIV use the drugs, approved only for treating erectile
dysfunction, to overcome the side effects of some HIV drugs.
For Keith Folger, living with HIV also means coping with
fatigue and the inability to maintain an erection to have
sex.
“ It’s a combination of me being 48 and the
fatigue that HIV causes,” Folger says. “I’m
horny as hell but I’m tired because I’m always
fatigued from HIV.”
Whether the HIV medications cause Folger’s impotence
or it’s the result of fatigue, Folger says he won’t
sit flaccidly by and miss out on sex.
“I just use Viagra,” Folger says.
Health researchers, though, are concerned that mixing erectile
dysfunction drugs with HIV medications or using them recreationally
can cause complications. Some studies show use of the drugs
among gay men can lead to riskier sex and higher rates of
HIV and STD infections.
The FDA approved Viagra for erectile dysfunction in 1998.
For the last few years, Folger has refilled his prescription
each month. But he hasn’t tried Cialis
or Levitra, competitors to Viagra that gained FDA
approval last year.
Crystal meth cocktail
Unlike Folger, some gay men obtain erectile dysfunction drugs
without a prescription to combat the impotence that comes
with using crystal meth, according to Dr. Charlotte Kent,
chief of epidemiology in the STD prevention and control division
of the San Francisco Department of Public Health.
Dubbed “crystal dick,” the meth-induced impotence
“provides motivation for people to take something to
compensate for the dysfunction that occurs,” Kent says.
Charles, who asked that his last name not be published, suffered
from impotence during the months he spent addicted to crystal
meth, and he took Viagra to compensate, he says.
The combination turned him into a veritable sex machine.
“That’s part of what allowed me to be able to
just concentrate on having sex with people,” Charles
says. “With the crystal I could stay up for three or
four days and have sex with 30 to 40 guys easily.”
Obtaining the pills was easy, he says.
“I called my own prescription in to pharmacies,”
Charles says. “Just pretended I was a doctor’s
office. Some people I know just order from Web sites that
provide a medical consultation online.”
But gay men who take the crystal meth-Viagra combination
contract HIV and STDs at a higher rate than men who take only
Viagra, according to a study to be released in March at the
2004 National STD Prevention Conference in Philadelphia.
“Where it is primarily a problem is when people are
using meth,” Kent says. “That’s where we
see the biggest risk factor.”
Specific results from the study weren’t available because
it has not yet been published. But gay men who had sex while
under the influence of both crystal meth and Viagra were several
times more likely to contract syphilis and HIV, Kent says.
A weekend of sex
One of the common places that gay men mix Viagra with crystal
meth, in addition to other party drugs, is at circuit parties,
according to a three-year-old study by the federal Centers
for Disease Control & Prevention.
Gay men use erectile dysfunction drugs to combine with common
party drugs such as crystal meth, amyl nitrates (poppers),
ketamine, gamma-hydroxybutyrate or gamma-butyrolactone (GHB-GBL),
and ecstasy, according to a December 2001 study by the CDC.
The study, published in the Journal of AIDS, examined the
sex and drug habits of 295 gay and bisexual men who attend
circuit parties.
During one weekend of drug use, 80 percent of study participants
used ecstasy, 66 percent used ketamine, 43 percent used crystal
meth, 29 percent used GHB/GBL, 14 percent used Viagra and
14 percent used poppers, according to the study.
Poppers and Viagra, when used together, create a potentially
lethal combination that could lead to heart failure, says
Dr. Lee Golusinski, a gay Atlanta doctor.
More than half of the circuit partiers used four or more
drugs during the course of the weekend, according to the study,
which concluded that the use of the drugs increased the likelihood
of “high-risk behavior,” such as unprotected anal
sex.
The study points a finger at Viagra for the increase.
“It is specifically associated with high-risk sexual
behavior,” according to the authors of the study.
The study’s authors offered two explanations for why
Viagra was being taken: HIV-positive men took erectile dysfunction
drugs to combat impotence caused by their medications or study
participants took Viagra to enable sex while on party drugs.
The combination of party drugs and impotence pills makes
sense, Golusinski says.
“We’ve got one drug that makes you want sex and
the other gives you the ability to have it,” Golusinski
says.
But doctors cannot name Viagra as the problem itself, says
Dr. Jason Schneider, who serves on the board of directors
of the Gay & Lesbian Medical Association.
“It depends on the individual person and the setting
in which it is used,” Schneider says. “If you
have a same-sex couple who has been together 30 or 40 years,
then no, they won’t be at higher risk. But contrast
that with a single guy at a circuit party using crystal meth.
He is at a higher risk. It’s not because of Viagra,
but of other drugs he’s doing and the setting he’s
in.”
Feds ‘drag their feet’
Advertisements and consumer information put out by the makers
of Cialis, Levitra
and Viagra warn prospective users that the pills don’t
provide protection from sexually transmitted diseases.
Officials with Eli Lilly & Company, which manufactures
Cialis, and Bayer
Pharmaceuticals and GlaxoSmithKline, which produces Levitra,
maintain their literature includes warnings against using
the drugs for other than their prescribed purposes. Disclaimers
also say the drugs do provide protection against HIV and other
STDs.
“It would be very clear to consumers what this product
is for and to help avoid any confusion they include HIV/STD
information,” says Carol Copeland, communication specialist
for Levitra.
Pfizer, which manufactures Viagra, did not respond to repeated
inquiries. But the company has long warned against the use
of the drug for nonapproved purposes, and has educated doctors
about the dangers of combining it with both legal and illegal
nitrates.
But the FDA should step in and require the companies to do
more, according to Dr. Jeff Klausner, director of the STD/HIV
prevention unit of the San Francisco Department of Public
Health. Warnings on the drugs should also make it clear that
it may increase the chance of contracting STDs, he says.
“The FDA has been dragging its feet on this issue,”
Klausner says. “They have not moved on the issue and
it is completely in their authority and responsibility to
make physicians and users of their product aware.”
In 2002, the San Francisco Department of Public Health asked
the FDA to place a more thorough warning on Viagra to make
it clear that sexual risks are associated with the drug, Klausner
says.
According to a July 2002 study in AIDS, Viagra users reported
greater numbers of recent sex partners, higher levels of unprotected
anal sex with an HIV-positive partner and higher rates of
STDs than non-users.
But the FDA did not follow the recommendation, according
to an FDA spokesperson.
With the launch of Levitra and Cialis late last year, the
number of new users of erectile dysfunction drugs increased,
according to data from NDCHealth, which tracks the numbers
of new and refilled prescriptions in pharmacies across the
country.
Of the three pills, Cialis remains in a user’s system
the longest — up to 36 hours — making it the perfect
pill for impotent men to take on a Friday afternoon so they
can remain sexually active for most of the weekend, Golusinski
says.
Source:http://www.southernvoice.com |