astral week
Established Member
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bubka said:Its less than 2%
I believe you have already made this statement in this thread.
bubka said:Its less than 2%
Stu85 said:My libido has gone down a lot recently, but I don't if it's just depression or something else. I am a little worried to be honest. I used to take dutasteride, but went back to finasteride after I got worried about side-effects.
astral week said:Stu85 said:My libido has gone down a lot recently, but I don't if it's just depression or something else. I am a little worried to be honest. I used to take dutasteride, but went back to finasteride after I got worried about side-effects.
Well if you are depressed, then of course that can definitely have an impact. From my own personal experience my libido was not affected by mild/moderate depression, it was only when I sunk very low that my libido dropped.
You can always quit finasteride for a week and see how that helps. If you suddenly have a stronger libido I would just drop the doseage.
May I ask why you took dutasteride initially instead of finasteride?
ttroy said:edit: oh you ment the sides: depresssion, anxiety, libido drop, moobs, texture changes in my dick, loss of sensation etc. My dick feels and looks weird and veiny.
retropunk said:ttroy said:edit: oh you ment the sides: depresssion, anxiety, libido drop, moobs, texture changes in my dick, loss of sensation etc. My dick feels and looks weird and veiny.
Texture changes?
I've said this before, and I'll say it again: I wouldn't read askapatient or propeciahelp too much. They're the epitome of a hypochondriac.
Pondle said:Astral, there are dogmatic positions on either side and I don't think the argument is going to progress. I myself have dismissed many of the claims made by anti-Propecia posters, partly because certain contributors are, as you say, determined to blame Propecia for almost every conceivable ill. I've argued robustly against many of these people, and it's guaranteed I won't be getting any Xmas cards from certain folks this year!
However, a recent NBER working paper gave me a little pause for thought. There is the possibility of certain events being so rare that they elude clinical trials, even the multi-thousand man studies that Propecia was subjected to.
http://healthcare-economist.com/2007/11 ... -problems/
On the other hand, until we have actual published case histories or some other kind of objective evidence, the claims for the more extreme adverse reactions and 'permanent' sides are limited to anecdotes on the internet. There's just no way of ascertaining the validity, accuracy and objectivity of the claims we've seen so far.