- Conservative Treatment Of Primary Phimosis In Adolescents
By Michel Beaugé MD - Quimper, France. -- Introduction - Being in charge for over ten years of the routine examination of college freshmen as part of the preventive medicine programme of the university, I diagnose a significant number of phimoses among older children and young adults. (Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0) Rate It - Conservative Treatments -- Norm-UK
The foreskin and the glans develop as one structure. Natural separation of the two structures occurs gradually during childhood. The age at which the foreskin becomes retractable differs for each child. It may take until the age of 17 or beyond. This is normal. Forcing the foreskin to retract may cause pain, bleeding, scarring, infection, and adhesions. Therefore, the foreskin of a child should be retracted only by the child himself when he is ready to do so. (Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0) Rate It - Fathering Magazine - Care of Boys With Tight Foreskins
Child care skills are normally passed down through the generations. Sometimes this passing down of knowledge can get interrupted. With a culture in which most males were circumcised for many years, the knowledge of how to care for a foreskin has largely disappeared in the US. (Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0) Rate It - Fathering Magazine - Care of Intact Boys
Our bodies are covered with skin. The skin on our noses goes to their tips and the skin on our fingers and toes goes to their tips. The penis, too, is covered with skin. The fold of skin that covers and protects the glans (head) of the penis is sometimes called the prepuce, but is more commonly known as the foreskin (Rating: 0.00 Votes: 0) Rate It - Raising Intact Sons
Did you know that many parents of intact boys can do without the "splatter guard" during potty training? This and other helpful hints about raising intact sons. (Rating: 1.00 Votes: 1) Rate It |