I had my final follow up with the urologist who did my circ today. Ususally he does it after a month but with his and my vacations it ended up being almost 2 months after. He was very happy with how it turned out cosmetically. My dick is 99.9% back to normal and getting regualr workouts. .
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Post-circumcision
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Good news that it turned out okay, but i just wonder if anyone's ever had surgery to make their circumsized penis uncircumsized? I just wonder if Mikeal Jakson had any plastic surgeries down their, (I didn't want to get sued, so I spelt his name wrong, so i'm not talking about him (Wink*, wink*)
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its impossable once your cut u cant be uncut *not like krazy glue would hold skin together
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could you really get sued for saying his name
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No, you can't. If you said something untrue about someone and cause damage to their reputation, that's called "slander" and people can be sued for that.
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That's true for everyday people. You can't get sued for saying something bad about a celebrity unless the intent is to harm them by knowingly publishing false information.
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In reply to:
its impossable once your cut u cant be uncut *not like krazy glue would hold skin together
Well, yes and no: technically there is no way to have an original foreskin back, with all the various parts of the foreskin such as the frenulum, ridged ban, inner mucosa, and all the nerve endings, etc.
However, there are two forms of foreskin "restoration", which provide a good replica of a foreskin that will at least look like the real thing: surgical restoration, and non-surgical restoration.
Surgical restoration involves a urologist or plastic surgeon who takes a skin graft from somewhere else on the body, usually the buttocks, and basically splices it onto the circumcised penis, with two incisions and sets of stitches. This basically lengthens the shaft skin to the point where it folds over the glans and covers the glans like a foreskin. This surgery is expensive, a bit risky, and the results aren't that good often. But the good part is you get a foreskin right away.
Non-surgical foreskin restoration involves using several devices that stretch your existing shaft skin and inner foreskin over a long period of time, which grows new skin cells and eventually makes enough skin that folds over the glans like a regular foreskin. However, this can take 2 to 3 years of stretching. The good part of this method is its low risk (safe), inexpensive, and the results can be very close to a real foreskin. But, you must have a lot of patience and desire to do it.
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In reply to:
Surgical restoration involves a urologist or plastic surgeon who takes a skin graft from somewhere else on the body, usually the buttocks, and basically splices it onto the circumcised penis, with two incisions and sets of stitches. This basically lengthens the shaft skin to the point where it folds over the glans and covers the glans like a foreskin. This surgery is expensive, a bit risky, and the results aren't that good often. But the good part is you get a foreskin right away.
I wonder if anyone here has had that done before.
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Someone Young: Foreskin restoration is a common and popular procedure, and thousands of men worldwide are involved in the process. However, "stretching" of remaining foreskin and shaftskin is the preferred method. Information about the procedure and lists of local support groups around the world may be found at http://www.norm.org/ One such local group may be found at http://www.norm-phoenix.org/Surgical restoration pioneered modern foreskin restoration about 15 years ago. As it is expensive, and as the results are somewhat unsatisfactory, surgery is seldom used today. Results achieved through the skin stretching process have been so successful that unaware doctors have been fooled into believing that the patient has always been intact.Korydon