
https://youtu.be/qYptxiCjQFA?si=dyp6grrYRkm0iBU6
Watcher1960 wrote:I’m a little over four weeks out from having a tactra implant. Surgeon has said I can start bending it from its post surgery straight out position. Problem is it won’t stay in a bent position. I can push it down and put on tight clothes, but it is still straining to straighten itself back out. Kind of uncomfortable. I’m not really endowed, so it’s not super noticeable. But I was less to believe pre surgery I’d be able to easily bend it down or up to 90 degrees and then bend it straight out for sex…. Any advice or similar experiences?
niceguy1 wrote:returntocenter wrote:Thank you for this post niceguy, it's enlightening. One question I had - in the days or weeks leading up to the development of your infection, can you think of anything you might have done or been exposed to that could have triggered it in the first place? Particularly messy sex, hot tubs, anything that could have exposed your genital area to unhygienic conditions? I know that by the 4-month mark none of this should really be a concern, but still - thinking back on it (as I'm sure you must have done ad nauseum) did anything come to mind?
Thanks again.
Good question, I have considered this ad nauseum and I do have a theory. In the weeks leading up to the infection I was on oral prednisone, which does have the side effect of lowering your immune system. The bacteria that caused the infection was cultured during explantation and determined to be E. Coli. I believe it was introduced during surgery and grew progressively over the months, but I remained asymptomatic due to my immune system supressing the infection. The oral steroids caused a weakening of the immune system and allowed the infection to run wild.
I shared this theory with Dr. Eid when I was in the hospital, and he told me something interesting that will be useful to everyone here. There was a study conducted where they cultured broken implants during revision surgery and found that 50% of the devices that were removed had detectable bacteria living on them. This means that half of us have a bacterial colony living on our devices right now that is significant enough to show up in a culture, but 99% of those who have the bacteria present do not ever get an infection. The most logical conclusion is that our immune systems are working to supress the bacteria from growing into a full blown infection. Therefore, I think is it important that everyone who has an implant takes active measures to keep their immune systems strong at all times and avoid any type of pharmaceuticals that may weaken your immune system.
tough enough to get rough with.
thedriver wrote:And I will answer this right now, (no I didn't lose length, still at a solid 7" but I did lose a 1/2 inch of girth, the wifey says all that much easier to gobble it down,,,,,,,,,,,, lol..................
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