A laid-back take on the cargo pant with Levi's® signature classic styling. Front slash pockets, side cargo pockets and back flap pockets with signature embroidery and logo tag. Button closure with zip fly. Easy fit.
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Casio Men's Forester Sports Thermometer Watch #AQF100W-7BV
Powerfully styled and packed full of robust timekeeping and environmental features, the Casio Forester analog-digital stainless steel men's watch offers a stylish black sports resin band that will stay comfortable during your most active sport outings. The large round stainless steel watch case measures 42mm (1.65 inches) wide, and it features an Arabic numeral and small minute index readout around its inner rim that interact with the silver skeleton hands. The light blue LCD face provides current time and date as well as a view to current moon phase. It includes a thermometer readout that measures every even-numbered minute, and you can save up to 50 time/temperature data sets. Other timekeeping features include:
* World time: 30 time zones, 50 cities, city code display, daylight saving on/off
* 1/100-second stopwatch with 100-hour capacity and following modes: elapsed time, split time, 1st-2nd place times
* Countdown timer (up to 100 hours)
* Auto-calendar (pre-programmed until the year 2099)
* 12/24-hour formats
* Daily alarm
* Hourly time signal (which can be turned off)
This watch also features a ±30-second accuracy per month, Afterglow backlighting, and water resistance to 100 meters (330 feet)--offering protection from accidental splashes as well suitable for swimming, snorkeling, and light recreational diving.
* World time: 30 time zones, 50 cities, city code display, daylight saving on/off
* 1/100-second stopwatch with 100-hour capacity and following modes: elapsed time, split time, 1st-2nd place times
* Countdown timer (up to 100 hours)
* Auto-calendar (pre-programmed until the year 2099)
* 12/24-hour formats
* Daily alarm
* Hourly time signal (which can be turned off)
This watch also features a ±30-second accuracy per month, Afterglow backlighting, and water resistance to 100 meters (330 feet)--offering protection from accidental splashes as well suitable for swimming, snorkeling, and light recreational diving.
Russell Athletic Men's Cotton Performance Pocket Tee
This stylish and comfortable Pocket-T is classy, comfortable, and made by Russell Athletic Sportswear.
Monday, January 19, 2009
World War II Mechanic's Sweater
Warm, comfortable, and easy to move in, our utilitarian sweater is modeled after the sweater GIs wore in the field during the long winter of 1944. Warm, comfortable, and easy to move Our special shawl collar buttons up tight to cut the cold. Knit of pure cotton in a beefy but versatile half-cardigan stitch for maximum flexibility. Zambezi® Twill elbow patches and button placket.
Thursday, January 8, 2009
ISA-TEST-Isatori Advanced Testosterone Formula, 104 Capsules
Help maximize free testosterone levels. Reduce estrogen levels to optimize body composition. Increase muscle mass, strength, and sexual drive. (These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.)
Male Fertility Supplement
Product Features
* Improves your overall reproductive health
* Improves sperm count, motility, and morphology
* All natural, doctor-approved
* Optimize your chances of conceiving
Monday, January 5, 2009
Prostate Cancer The Definition
Prostate cancer is a malignant (cancerous) tumor (growth) that consists of cells from the prostate gland. The tumor usually grows slowly and remains confined to the gland for many years. During this time, the tumor produces little or no symptoms or outward signs (abnormalities on physical examination). As the cancer advances, however, it can spread beyond the prostate into the surrounding tissues (local spread). Moreover, the cancer also can metastasize (spread even farther) throughout other areas of the body, such as the bones, lungs, and liver. Symptoms and signs, therefore, are more often associated with advanced prostate cancer.
Why is prostate cancer important?
Prostate cancer is the most common malignancy in American men and the second leading cause of deaths from cancer, after lung cancer. Most experts in this field, therefore, recommend that beginning at age 40, all men should undergo yearly screening for prostate cancer.
Prostate Gland
Why is prostate cancer important?
Prostate cancer is the most common malignancy in American men and the second leading cause of deaths from cancer, after lung cancer. Most experts in this field, therefore, recommend that beginning at age 40, all men should undergo yearly screening for prostate cancer.
Prostate Gland
Thursday, January 1, 2009
Acqua Di Gio By Giorgio Armani For Men. Eau De Toilette Spray 3.4 Ounces
A resolutely masculine fragrance born from the sea, the sun, the earth, and the breeze of a Mediterranean island. Transparent, aromatic, and woody in nature Aqua Di Gio Pour Homme is a contemporary expression of masculinity, in an aura of marine notes, fruits, herbs, and woods. Fragrance notes: citrus notes, rosemary spiciness, jasmine, hint of wood and ocean breezes. Recommended use: casual.
Aging Male Syndrome
Men go through aging male syndrome (AMS) between the ages of 35 and 65 when their hormone levels (especially testosterone) decline. Testosterone is a hormone that helps maintain sex drive, sperm production, pubic and body hair, muscle, and bone. The decline of testosterone is normal in healthy males as they age. Unlike women who lose their fertility (ability to get pregnant) when they reach menopause, men do not lose their fertility. But the hormone change may cause other symptoms. All men have different experiences — some men's hormone levels go down more than others, and some men have more symptoms than others.
A decline in testosterone can affect a man's body. AMS has many signs:
* Feeling fat/weight gain
* Problems sleeping
* Less interest in sex
* Feeling irritable or angry
* Erection problems
* Nervousness
* Problems with memory and concentration
* Muscle loss
* Increased urination
* Depression
* Loss of energy
* Bone and hair loss
If you're having these symptoms of low testosterone, talk to your doctor. You can get your testosterone level tested with a simple blood test. Get the test in the morning, when the testes release more testosterone. Because a normal level of testosterone is different for each man, it may be hard to know if you have low testosterone — it helps if you had a testosterone test earlier in your life, so you'll be able to see any change. If you do have low testosterone, think about visiting a specialist, such as an endocrinologist or urologist, who can work with you to treat this problem.
How an erection occurs
At its most basic level, an erection is a matter of hydraulics. Blood fills the penis, causing it to swell and become firm. But getting to that stage requires extraordinary orchestration of body mechanisms. Blood vessels, nerves, hormones, and, of course, the psyche must work together. Problems with any one of these elements can diminish the quality of an erection or prevent it from happening altogether.
In many cases, an erection really starts in a man's brain. A sight, a touch, a smell, or perhaps just a memory sparks intense activity in the hypothalamus, an area near the base of the brain. Electrical signals of sexual arousal travel from the brain down to an area in the lower part of the spinal cord. Nerves in this area signal nerves in the pelvis, which tell arteries to let blood into the penis and cause an erection.
Direct genital stimulation can also cause an erection, but different nerve pathways are involved. In this case, the sensation is carried by the pudendal nerve, which runs from the penis to the sacral nerves in the lower spine. The sacral nerves then send messages that cause the arteries in the penis to admit blood. During sexual activity, both of these nerve pathways are involved in producing an erection.
Nerves talk to each other by releasing nitric oxide and other chemical messengers. These messengers boost the production of other important chemicals, including cyclic guanosine monophosphate, prostaglandins, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. These chemicals initiate the erection by relaxing the smooth muscle cells lining the tiny arteries that lead to the corpora cavernosa, a pair of flexible cylinders that run the length of the penis
The penis is made up of three cylindrical bodies, the corpus spongiosum (spongy body) — which contains the urethra and includes the glans (head) of the penis — and two corpora cavernosa (erectile bodies), that extend from within the body out to the end of the penis to support erection. Blood enters the corpora cavernosa through the central arteries.
As the arteries relax, the thousands of tiny caverns, or spaces, inside these cylinders fill with blood. Blood floods the penis through two central arteries, which run through the corpora cavernosa and branch off into smaller arteries. The amount of blood in the penis increases sixfold during an erection. The blood filling the corpora cavernosa compresses and then closes off the openings to the veins that normally drain blood away from the penis
When a man is sexually stimulated, chemical signals from the brain cause the penile arteries to widen, allowing more blood to enter the erectile bodies known as the corpora cavernosa. The tissues swell with blood, causing an erection. At the same time, the blood-engorged tissues compress the veins, keeping blood in the penis and maintaining the erection.
As most people know, testosterone is important to the erection process. Certainly, a man needs a normal level of this hormone to start and maintain an erection. But for all the talk about hormones and virility, doctors don't know exactly what role sex hormones play in normal libido or the ability to have erections.
Obviously, an erection isn't permanent. Some signal — usually an orgasm, but possibly a distraction, interruption, or even cold temperature — brings an erection to an end. This process, called detumescence, occurs when the chemical messengers that started and maintained the erection stop being produced, and other chemicals, such as the enzyme phosphodiesterase 5 (PDE5), destroy the remaining messengers. Blood seeps out of the passages in the corpora cavernosa. Once this happens, the veins in the penis begin to open up again and the blood drains out. The trickle becomes a gush, and the penis returns to its limp, or flaccid, state.
It's usually difficult for a man to get another erection right away. The length of the interval between erections varies, depending on a man's age, his health, and whether he is sexually active on a regular basis. A young, sexually active man in good health may be able to get an erection after just a few minutes, whereas a man in his 50s or older may have to wait 24 hours. One reason may be that nerve function slows with age.
Indeed, erections may work on a use-it-or-lose-it principle. Some research suggests that when the penis is flaccid for long periods of time — and therefore deprived of a lot of oxygen-rich blood — the low oxygen level causes some muscle cells to lose their flexibility and gradually change into something akin to scar tissue. This scar tissue seems to interfere with the penis's ability to expand when it's filled with blood.
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