unencumbered (imported) wrote: Wed May 18, 2011 4:28 am The injections do work. They will permanently lower one's testosterone level significantly, similar to what one might experience when one is chemically castrated. However, from my experience anyway, they will not bring one to the lowest level that surgical castration does. For some, the injections are a temporary bridge to complete castration, while for others they are enough. There are risks involved, as some here have related from their personal experiences, and they may result in a recommended orchiectomy diagnosis to avoid potential problems later.
I concur. Injections worked for me. Balls small and hard and numb. T level was down to 90 early on, might be lower now but hard to tell since I do take T gel to keep my level hovering about 150 on average (to hopefully avoid negative consequences of very low T....although I may change my mind about that in the future and eliminate T gel) .
Hoping that some day during a regular exam my small hard balls will be discovered and may eventually lead to their removal.
I would never suggest or recommend that anyone do alcohol injections into their balls. If done wrong, unknown number of negative consequences might result. I only decided to do it after reading medical lab experiments that concluded that [
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alcohol injections into the test
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es of lab mice (or was it rats?) destroyed the testes ability to produce testosterone and they did not self-repair. But it was my decision, I took the risk, nobody egged me on or suggested or recommended that I do this. I took full responsibility.
When my T level was high my craving to be castrated (or kill my balls) was so high I sought out any relatively safe and affordable solution. Since castration looked like a no-go, I chose alcohol injections. This was not a logical or rational course of action and I don't know why I was so compelled to proceed. But now that the deed is done, I have no regrets. I lucked out and after two years of hurdles, confusion, errors and anxiety I am pleased with the results - so far. It is an ever evolving adaptive process.