Earlier this month, an FDA advisory committee voted to recommend the approval of flibanserin, Sprout Pharmaceutical’s drug for women with persistently low sexual desire. The drug has a number of vocal critics, who believe that its side effects, relative to its modest effect, could be harmful for women.
Although many news stories about flibanserin have described it as “female Viagra,” the drug actually works on the brain, not the body. Viagra (and drugs like it) improves blood flow in the penis but does not affect how a man feels desire. In contrast, flibanserin does not act on clitoral or vaginal tissues, but instead changes the activity of sexual circuits in the brain to increase a woman’s desire for sex. But this shift doesn’t happen for every woman who takes the drug, and some women report increased rates of fatigue, dizziness, and lowered blood pressure when they take it.
that line wont work with this dawa. boyfie will mchele you this in the house you will be grinding the corner on that stove of yours as you wait for him to recover from rounds 6 & 7…
:p;)
Sometimes hayo ni mateso…you don’t want to be ovulating then you take the sit behind the driver kwa those old mats …
zenye huwa zina vibrate and they keep on stopping Abeg OO your chicks can literally turn pink…mateso hayo
:rolleyes::rolleyes:
you have stories but you refuse to share them. Im sure your stories can rival ka-buda’s…now you’ll have @Unicorn and @trish ditching their moti’s at home. ati petrol imepanda bei, wacha nipande mathree…