Extra-baggage (imported) wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2015 2:17 am Your right, and as a former serving specialist combat soldier, I have extensive experience bunging up human holes (including several of my own). I'm only asking for videos/texts as I like to be 110% prepared, as currently I am only 95%, and my promise to you all is that I will be 110 before I shave my scrotum. As the saying goes; he who dares, wins. I am a super careful person and it has taken a full year to get to this point (prepping,learning etc). I have many questions to ask you guys as I go through the motions, and am really grateful for your responses, however, I will be doing this, I need to, I'm looking forward to it, so is my wife. I can't stress enough, that I have done my research, that I am a fully cognitive adult, and that I am responsible and will operate in a fashion that is safe, sterile and exacting, that I will have all contingencies in place and I am fully aware of the changes that will take place in my body, indeed most are welcome. I'm sorry if I indicated that my question was safety orientated, but as stated, I have the safety, the SOP's and the contingencies all in the bag. Although I hadn't considered the atmosphere, this is added to the list as of now! Lol. I'm going to have to put some serious thought into this.......
Dumb question. Can you convince the VA that the pain is a result of combat-related strains or injuries, and get them to pay for quality treatment? I can provide papers indicating that removal is the best option for pain management in the long term. That said, you're quoting the motto of the SAS, so you might have a
perience any post-operative pain. Good luck and best wishes.It's not a matter of "in case", it's a matter of "will". Also, many NSAIDs (really, the vast majority) are cyclooxygenase inhibitors, and have antiplatelet effects - this is why baby aspirin is used as a prophylactic against heart attack. They will have the effect of slowing clotting, and increasing the risk of blood loss, as well as probably increasing seepage from any incisions - this will lead to hematoma, bruising, swelling, and I'm told that during the first week, hematomas at the end of the sperm cords can be the size of the testicles you removed. Also, such swelling is usually the reason that cutters get caught - they'll be talked into a simultaneous scrotal ablation, make things nice and tight, and the swelling will burst the stitches. After that, admission to the ER is usually inevitable, and the patient flipping on the cutter is usually also inevitable.eunuch2001 (imported) wrote: Tue Jun 23, 2015 5:13 am different bureaucracy to navigate.
Also, Eunuch2001 says,
I'm guessing you already have some painkillers for the orchialgia. Keep them close by in case you ex
A professional surgeon would be ideal, if you can BS your way into the operating theatre of one in short order, or find a no-psychiatric-referral-necessary one. Consider their fee insurance against complications - cleaning up after a botched castration can cost ten to fifteen times as much as doing it right in the first place; insurance in the US can bring down the price to under $100 if you can get a doctor to tell them it's medically necessary. Some portion of urologists will treat intractable, chronic pain with removal.