It all started as a laboratory accident. A group of chemists working together at Pfizer’s research facility in Sandwich, Kent, England, were studying a drug that they synthesised for the treatment of high blood pressure and angina pectoris, which is symptomatic of ischaemic heart disease. After conducting their first clinical trials at the Morrison Hospital, Swansea, they found out that that the drug had little effect on angina, but it produced a startling side effect: it induced the erection of the penis of men who were thought to be impotent.
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"What terrible times I had when I was the age of my kids? They don't have to undergo the same despondent feelings my wife and me had to endure", you lazily say to yourself as the hammock sways to and fro in the gentle breeze. You still dread the day you were diagnosed with erectile dysfunction. "Impotence won't affect my kids", you think reassuredly looking at the magic blue pill in your hand.
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