Sunday, April 10, 2016

Vasectomy Recovery Guidelines

Immediately after your vasectomy, everything you do or don’t do can mean the difference between a simple, painless recovery and a sore, miserable experience that lasts for days, weeks, or even longer. Here are six easy-to-follow suggestions to give you the best probability for a quick recovery.

1. Most importantly, stay off your feet for several days. The delicate tissues will swell up and hurt if you spend time standing for the first days of recovery. This means you cannot go out to dinner somewhere in St. Louis, a movie, or any activity where you're standing a lot. It's best if you sit around for several days, taking it easy.

2. Avoid lifting of heavy items or straining for around a week or two. If it’s heavier than a gallon of milk, then don’t pick it up. Needless to say, everyone knows you can move that fridge or pick up that keg but immediately after a vasectomy is not necessarily the time to prove it.  And this means if you work out, no squats, crunches, or leg presses for a couple weeks. Your core and muscles will be just fine without the heavy lifting and exercises.

prostate cancer urology doctor3. You should ice up down there (20 to 30 minutes on, 10 off) for a couple of days following the vasectomy.  You can use frozen peas. This will reduce inflammation and swelling, and give you a more comfortable recovery. And be sure to put the ice outside of your underwear, never right against the skin.

4. Wear an athletic supporter or bike compression shorts, outside your underwear, to offer support during the first week or two following the vasectomy. Gravity and movement aren't best for recently traumatized tissues within your scrotum.

5. Take anti-inflammatory medications like naproxen or ibuprofen, as directed by your physician, for the first few days to minimize swelling, inflammation, and discomfort. Of course, don’t take these if you have had issues with upset stomach or stomach ulcers.

6. No sex (all definitions) for one week to let the area heal. And then, after one week, just with birth control until you are told it's safe to go without. The vasectomy doesn't immediately sterilize you! It only blocks the resupply of fresh sperm into the pipes, so it will take two months or more to flush out the sperm in your system. That's why you have to check and make sure you are cleared out with a sperm check at eight weeks. Don't ever assume you're sterile, as sometimes it takes a lot longer and so you could still be fertile.

The good thing is that for most men, recovery following a vasectomy is relatively easy and painless, especially when you follow these simple guidelines. If you think that you might want to get a vasectomy or want to know more about the procedure, visit Metropolitan Urological Specialists. They help men all around St. Louis, Creve Coeur, Florissant, and Kirkwood, MO with these procedures.

Vasectomy Reversal (Vasovasostomy)

A vasectomy is recognized as a permanent approach to birth control. Vasectomy reversal (vasovasostomy) reconnects the tubes (vas deferens) that were cut in a vasectomy. If you are considering a vasovasostomy, you'll want to read this information given by Metropolitan Urological Specialists in St. Louis, MO.

Vasectomy reversal is usually an outpatient procedure (without an overnight stay in the hospital). Spinal or general anesthesia is typically utilized to ensure that you stay entirely still throughout the surgery.

The odds of vasectomy reversal success depend on just how much time has passed between your vasectomy and the reversal. With time, additional blockages can develop, and some men create antibodies to their own sperm.

The surgery is much more complicated and takes more time when blockage between the vas deferens and the epididymis requires correction (vasoepididymostomy).

vasectomy reversal vasovasostomy What To Expect After Surgery

Vasectomy reversal normally takes from two to four hours, followed by a few more hours for recovery from the anesthetic. You will probably go home the same day.

Pain can be mild to moderate. You should be able to resume normal activities, like sex, within three weeks.

Why It Is Done

Vasectomy reversal is done when you've  had a vasectomy and would now like to be fertile.

How Well It Works

Probability of a successful vasectomy reversal decline over time. Reversals are more successful in the first decade after vasectomy.

Generally, vasectomy reversal:
•   Brings about overall pregnancy rates of higher than 50%.
•   Has the greatest chance of success within three years of the vasectomy.
•   Causes pregnancy only about 30% of the time if the reversal is done ten years following vasectomy.

Risks

Risks of vasectomy reversal include:
•   Infection at the site of surgery.
•   Fluid buildup in the scrotum (hydrocele) that might require draining.
•   Injury to the arteries or nerves within the scrotum.

What To Consider

Before a vasectomy reversal is carried out, your doctor will want to make sure you were fertile before your vasectomy.

You can have tests to find whether you have sperm antibodies in your semen before and after vasectomy reversal. If there are sperm antibodies inside your semen after surgery, your partner is unlikely to become pregnant. In this case, you may decide to try in vitro fertilization with intracytoplasmic sperm injection.

If you have any questions concerning reverse vasectomy or any of the other services provided by Metropolitan Urological Specialists, set up a meeting with them and they’ll give you the answers you need. Metropolitan Urological Specialists is a good place to go for urological knowledge in St. Louis, Creve Coeur, Florissant, and Kirkwood, Missouri.