Virilis Pro Sued

Maybe this should be an alert. This guy is from Houston.
He was on his way to a motel with his significant other. Yeah right.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/0...n_1840561.html

If a story involving an erection pill, penis surgery and lots of blood doesn't suit your fancy, you should probably stop reading.

If it does, meet Adrian Carter, who claims in a lawsuit filed on Monday that a Virilis Pro pill made his penis bleed and led to a terrifying surgery in which much of his manhood's skin had to be removed.

Oh, it gets worse.

Carter bought a bottle of Virilis Pro at a gas station in Houston, on the way to a motel to enjoy a night with his significant other in May 2011.

"During sexual intercourse, plaintiff experienced significant pain and observed a large quantity of blood squirting out of his penis onto the sheets, walls and mirror in the hotel room; his penis and scrotum were visibly swollen," writes his lawyer, Melissa Moore, in a complaint obtained by Courthouse News Service.

He immediately went to an emergency room in the area, where he underwent surgery. Doctors had to "deglove," or remove, the skin from Carter's penis, because his urethra had separated completely and the organ was dangerously swollen (beyond Virilis Pro's intended target).

Carter, who now urinates through a catheter, may never have an erection again, according to Moore.

Representatives from Haute Health, the manufacturers of Virilis Pro, didn't immediately respond to The Huffington Post's request for comment. The company's website maintains that there are no side effects from the "all-natural male enhancement" pill, though the statements haven't been approved by the FDA.

"It's made with only natural ingredients to prevent harmful side effects. Always check with a healthcare professional before using any supplement," the site states. "Virilis Pro is a male enhancement supplement that works to give you a harder erection for natural male enlargement and a more intense orgasm."

Ingredients include: Epimedium, Tribulus Terrestris, Panax Ginseng, Rhodiola Rosea, Lycium Chinese and Yohimbe Extract.

Carter's case appears to be unique, if online customer reviews are to be believed.

"They work great," one customer writes on Amazon, "and I have tried just about everything out there."
ZedX79's Avatar
I don't buy the entire story.
To make this even appear in court, he'd have to have a statement from his doctor that he had a consultation before using the drug. Then he'd have to get the ER doctor's to confirm that it was in fact the supplement which caused the need for surgery. But if something swells from an allergic reaction, it would not have just been his member affected. And if it was in fact an allergic reaction, then it would be his primary physician at fault, not the company. If it's the company's product, via a contamination of some sort or unmarked change in ingredients, wouldn't there be more cases happening around the same time? I bet something like this will spurn a whole bunch of copycats looking for quick settlements...