Medical Concerns

Boogie77 (imported)
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Re: Medical Concerns

Post by Boogie77 (imported) »

justapup (imported) wrote: Fri Jul 16, 2021 10:25 pm I just recently spent time with a guy that had Ed, but had a surgery involving implants in the penis, groin/body and sac. It was a pump that filled balloons in his cock to make himself hard. I did not notice the difference betweenthat or a natural hard dick. Hope this is relevant to the topic. https://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-proced ... c-20384916

That’s good to hear, I suppose. Wouldn’t it be preferable to use a vacuum pump and a cock ring? I saw a demonstration of it actually being used. I agree it works. But I think I will pass. Thanks for the info.
Valery_V (imported)
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Re: Medical Concerns

Post by Valery_V (imported) »

Erectile Dysfunction (ED, Impotence)

Summary:

https://medlineplus.gov/erectiledysfunction.html
seanthomas (imported)
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Re: Medical Concerns

Post by seanthomas (imported) »

For years I've stood on my soapbox shouting that men like myself with ED need to realize a penis is not the only route to sexual satisfaction. I most often use the analogy of lesbians, who manage just fine without a penis. ED is an opportunity to explore all the other erogenous areas of the body and even a flaccid penis is still a pleasurable body part.
Boogie77 (imported)
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Re: Medical Concerns

Post by Boogie77 (imported) »

Valery_V (imported) wrote: Sat Jul 17, 2021 6:04 pm Erectile Dysfunction (ED, Impotence)

Summary:

https://medlineplus.gov/erectiledysfunction.html

Wow! That is great information. I saw three meds that I take or have taken. I don’t think that is the problem though. I think it was that TURP procedure. Had I known then what ‘I know now I certainly wouldn’t have had it done. But yesterday is gone and can’t get it back.
Paolo
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Re: Medical Concerns

Post by Paolo »

Jesus A and I were just emailing back and forth about this.

I think we might a short "article" for EA sometime this summer about it.

My thoughts on it were, if the side effects of castration (varying with age of castration) were SO bad, then why did eunuchs live up to 15 years longer than intact men, and why were there societies in which people were lining up to volunteer (or volunteer their sons) for it?
erikboy (imported)
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Re: Medical Concerns

Post by erikboy (imported) »

Paolo wrote: Sun Jul 18, 2021 4:34 pm Jesus A and I were just emailing back and forth about this.

I think we might a short "article" for EA sometime this summer about it.

My thoughts on it were, if the side effects of castration (varying with age of castration) were SO bad, then why did eunuchs live up to 15 years longer than intact men, and why were there societies in which people were lining up to volunteer (or volunteer their sons) for it?

There certainly are some bad effects related to castration, especially if castrated period is very long. Like osteoporosis. Kyphosis was quite common among eunuchs. But modern medicine helps to alleviate these side effects, and many other side effects. So modern day eunuchs might live even longer. The longer the castrated period in life the longer life expectancy is.
Valery_V (imported)
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Re: Medical Concerns

Post by Valery_V (imported) »

erikboy (imported) wrote: Tue Jul 20, 2021 12:54 pm There certainly are some bad effects related to castration, especially if castrated period is very long. Like osteoporosis. Kyphosis was quite common among eunuchs. But modern medicine helps to alleviate these side effects, and many other side effects. So modern day eunuchs might live even longer. The longer the castrated period in life the longer life expectancy is.

Kyphosis

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kyphosis
plix (imported)
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Re: Medical Concerns

Post by plix (imported) »

I was castrated at age 20 after thinking it over for a few months beforehand. I was aware of most of the consequences but was still willing to take the risk. However, I'd be willing to bet there are some consequences that we still don't know about, so it's always a good idea to be sure that castration is something you are willing to live with for the rest of your life.

I live in the United States, so my experiences with affording T may be different from yours. Here, the only legal options are paying for it out-of-pocket, having private or public insurance pay for it, or acquiring it free through a patient assistance program sponsored by the pharmaceutical companies, and that last one is what I was originally able to do because of my financial circumstances. Now, I get it through my local health center's pharmacy at a reduced cost, again because of my financial circumstances.

My experience has been that injectable T is typically the most affordable form. However, some (such as myself) prefer the more stable levels that you get with gels.

The long-term health effects are certainly one of the riskiest aspects of castration. You don't really know how it's going to affect you until you've done it, and everyone's experience will be different. In my case, while I did fine back when I was first castrated with no hormones in my system, I now experience significant health problems at age 36 if I don't take any hormone replacement. I don't know exactly why. Some of this could be aging itself, or it's possible that some of my other glands (adrenal, thyroid, etc.) aren't doing as well as they used to.

In any case, the most significant health problems for me when I don't take any hormones include severe difficulty sleeping, depression, irritability, low energy, weight gain, and cognitive functioning difficulties. I also experience constipation, which may be surprising since I don't recall ever hearing that mentioned as a side effect of castration (and my doctor hasn't either), but it definitely happens to me when I don't take any hormones. I haven't yet figured out a way to deal with all of them that doesn't involve taking hormones (either T or E).

Just a lack of T never caused me to develop any breast tissue, but I did develop a small but noticeable amount from my times taking E.

My procedure was performed by a licensed doctor, so I wasn't too worried about that. However, I did develop an infection afterwards, so even going that route is not guaranteed to be free of problems.

Hope that helps! :)
Boogie77 (imported)
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Re: Medical Concerns

Post by Boogie77 (imported) »

My thoughts would be to do a complete blood panel. There may be other issues that need to be addressed. We do this about every six months and can graph the results to indicate significant swings.
erikboy (imported)
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Re: Medical Concerns

Post by erikboy (imported) »

plix (imported) wrote: Tue Jul 27, 2021 4:16 pm In any case, the most significant health problems for me when I don't take any hormones include severe difficulty sleeping, depression, irritability, low energy, weight gain, and cognitive functioning difficulties. I also experience constipation, which may be surprising since I don't recall ever hearing that mentioned as a side effect of castration (and my doctor hasn't either), but it definitely happens to me when I don't take any hormones. I haven't yet figured out a way to deal with all of them that doesn't involve taking hormones (either T or E).

yes, it is so confusing how much effects of no T vary. some eunuchs do not complain about insomnia at all, saying that they sleep even better without T. I've gone through few chemcastration periods. For me one of the first signs of very low T is debilitating insomnia along with lack of morning erections. First 2 months are usually the hardest. I just can not sleep. I stay awake all the night, aware of my surroundings no matter what I do. I totally lacked that wonderful feeling of freshness after a good sleep. Over months my sleep improved and I was able to sleep in short sleep spans of 1-2 hours, waking up around 5 times during the night. Sometimes waking up only twice. But still, my sleep was shallow and not satisfactory.

But I did not experience depression. Instead I felt happy about being castrated. One of my friends pointed out that I look much happier than year before. Over time I think I developed dopamine deficit. That made me feel much more indifferent about my surroundings and events around me. I just didn't care much. And I felt kind of joyless. I experienced so called brainfog during the first 2 months. And also I enjoyed so called "eunuch calm" at times. Interestingly I had no weight gain. Even vice versa. First half of my eunuch day usually looked very energetic. thanx to coffee. And second half of the day I was suffering from bad sleep and lack of energy and motivation to do anything. Still it wasn't too bad. For me, insomnia was the worst side effect of low T.

Interestingly when my T levels were below 20ng/ml I felt properly castrated. At levels around 50ng/ml I started to feel libido returning.
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