Reuters reported last week on an study to be published in the Journal of Physiology that was conducted by a team at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The study was looking at the impact of Buy Viagra online on the release of the hormone oxytocin.

Oxytocin has for some time been associated with breast feeding, as it is a hormone that stimulates ejection of milk from the nipples, and its release is triggered by breast stimulation. More recently oxytocin has been implicated in other physiological processes including contractions of the uterus (both during childbirth and during orgasm), as well as being associated with the feeling of relaxation and satiation following orgasm. Oxytocin is often referred to in popular media as a "love hormone".

The researchers found that when rats are given Viagra and then stimulated they produce three times as much oxytocin Order Soma on-line. as when they are stimulated without receiving Buy Viagra online (let it be said that this "stimulation" probably isn't much fun for these rats).

As soon as I read of the study I began to imagine a whole new Buy Viagra online campaign, Buy ionamin online.. Possibly anticipating this response, the study's author, Professor Meyer Jackson, was quoted by Reuters as saying:

“What I hope is that people read our paper who can test these ideas in animals and humans… Cheap vicodin I hope that this doesn’t cause some wild orgy of inappropriate recreational use.”
While I completely expected the media to follow Pfizer’s train of thought here, that Buy Viagra online isn’t just good for sex, it’s good for love. What really surprised me was the fact that physiology professors were so adept at punning.