Feds Eye Viagra-Blindness Reports
Drug Alters Blood Flow In Body, May Alter Circulation To Optic Nerve
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Play CBS Video Video Feds Eye Viagra-Vision Reports Twenty-three million men take Viagra. A small number of them are going blind. Sharyl Attkisson talks with one blinded man who might be part of a connection between the drug and optic nerve damage.
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Jimmy Grant attributes his loss of vision to Viagra, and is suing Pfizer. (CBS)
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Quiz Your Eyes In Focus Dr. Mallika Marshall dispels some misconceptions about what causes your eyes to fail. See how much you know.
A review of 103 Viagra clinical trials involving 13,000
patients found no reports of non-arteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (NAION). Outside of clinical trials, Viagra has been used by more than 23 million men worldwide over the past seven years and reports of visual field loss due to NAION are extremely rare.
There is no evidence showing that NAION occurred more frequently in men taking Viagra than men of similar age and health who did not take Viagra.
NAION is the most common acute optic nerve disease in adults over age 50 and it shares a number of common risk factors with erectile dysfunction: age over 50, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes. Most of the reported cases in which NAION has occurred in men taking Viagra have involved patients with underlying anatomic or vascular risk factors associated with the development of NAION. This makes it impossible to determine whether these events are caused by the patient’s underlying vascular risk factors, anatomical defects, Viagra or a combination of these factors -- or to other factors.
Pfizer is in discussions with the Food and Drug Administration to update the Viagra label to reflect these rare ocular occurrences. Viagra has a strong safety profile and remains an effective medication that benefits millions of patients.
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




