Wellbutrin helps increase norepinephrine and dopamine. What Conditions Do Effexor and Wellbutrin Treat? Effexor and Wellbutrin are
Specifically, it is a norepinephrine and dopamine reuptake inhibitor (NDRI). Bupropion (Wellbutrin, Wellbutrin XL, Wellbutrin (SSRIs)
Strattera is a powerful and selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor, while Wellbutrin is a combined norepinephrine
Strattera is a powerful and selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor, while Wellbutrin is a combined norepinephrine
Like Wellbutrin and Wellbutrin SR, it is not an SNRI. Wellbutrin XL is an NDRI (norepinephrine and dopamine reuptake inhibitor) antidepressant.
Strattera is a powerful and selective norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor, while Wellbutrin is a combined norepinephrine
Wellbutrin is a norepinephrine and dopamine reuptake inhibitor (NDRI), and it works by keeping the neurotransmitters norepinephrine and dopamine
Wellbutrin works by making more norepinephrine and dopamine available to nerve cells. Bupropion (Wellbutrin, Wellbutrin XL, Wellbutrin
Wellbutrin only affects two of them, norepinephrine and dopamine. Wellbutrin is a Norepinephrine-Dopamine Re-uptake Inhibitor. It inhibits
Comments
Damn!
Bill S.
Just a poorly written cuck story.
If he couldn’t afford corrective counseling then a prescription for Wellbutrin would solve one problem but would add another. Taking Wellbutrin stops all ejaculations but not the good feelings. He could last forever.
And under a Dr.s supervision he could go off that medication long enough to have some fun himself.
Bill S.
Beyond that, though, Wellbutrin can work for women's libido as well because it affects dopamine levels in such a way that contributes to the proper activation of the reward circuitry of the brain. This theoretically facilitates the behavioral aspects which reinforce the desire to engage in sexual activity over time. One other thing to consider is utilizing the effects of oxytocin release to stir up the desire for sexual intimacy. Try engaging your partner in a long embrace, upwards of 20 seconds, just holding each other close. By the end of that 20 seconds, you might be surprised by how elevated your heart rate and breathing gets and you may even feel butterflies in your stomach. Another way is to just sit together in silence for 10 minutes in the dark while holding hands. It is almost like mutual meditation, where you become hypersensitive to your partner's contact with your skin, so much so that it blots out your other thoughts and adds a sense of anticipation. The key to all of this is to cultivate mindfulness and learn to be completely in the moment. Meditation, in general can help a lot in this respect, and remember, the enemy of libido is stress. Too much stress and your body literally loses the biochemical capacity for generating and sustaining desire.
The general tone of disapproval from the public and particularly the powers -that-be (the legislators and the courts) and the medical profession has become worse as the technology improved, particularly in the last 10 or so years. There was a small interval mainly in the sixties and early seventies when society loosened up and then another tiny one in the late nineties when the medical profession realized they could make money out of the oldies' sexual dysfunction but here more than any other aspect of health and the body it's now necessary to be forceful and knowedgeable. Don't depend on the MD's to turn you into a super stud or even an old version of such. Do your homework.
You say As for the little blue pills, I never went to the doctor so I've never tried them. I feel my problem was more libido than physical but of course, I could be wrong. Grrrr... Libido is governed by your levels of testosterone which typically drop as we age. Most males of our age should be doing HRT like the women only our H is testosterone. But society hates this idea. Dreams of hormonally charged males raping their virgin grandaughters or synthetically enhanced athletes gaining an unfair advantage underly the discussion. Risks are vastly over-exaggerated probably to assuage the conciences of the blue-noses. The MD's for their part last heard of hormones in medical school years ago but know enough to understand that this is a vastly complex subject and since they see it as recreation (it's no longer procreation at our age) they feel they can fob off the customer with a PDE5 supressor and that's it. Since they won't do it, you have to: homework, homework, homework.
(Some minor insight on T (no substitute for your homework): There are multiple versions of T, some rarely tested for. The amount of T you need depends on the quantity of androgenergic receptors on your cells and their sensitivity. I've never heard of a test for this -- probably only research at the moment. Thus you can have high T levels with low receptor sensitivity and low libido or (as is the case with most teenagers) low T levels and high sensitivity and hence high libido. Teens also have much more of pulsitile production of T (and the other hormones) which appears to raise libido and the sperm production significantly. With old males T level production is almost flat. For current research try the Journal of Andrology and/or the British Journal of Urology (the US one costs money). Again, don't depend on your MD to do YOUR homework.]
IMO every aged male should be on T replacement, take a PDE5 supressor regularly and use some drug to raise the dopamine and/or norepinephrine levels (I use Yohimbine (USP grade) but L-Dopa or apomorphine could substitute - watch for nasty side-effects with these).
It's your body: you don't stop reading because you eyesight has deteriorated do you?