We have tonsil stones
kidney stonesgallbladder stonesEven salivary stonesDo any calcified obstructions gumm up the works in the jizzum department?
We have tonsil stones
kidney stonesgallbladder stonesEven salivary stonesAccording to this article, it’s rare but happens.
:eek: Yikes!
That’s the option that doesn’t involve cutting any new holes in the plumbing. What’s so yikes about that? It sounds like a good idea to me.
Yes, but then cum stone has to be dragged through the delicate plumbing to get it out.
Which will cause the patient minor discomfort for a few minutes at a time, on a few occasions per day, for maybe two or three days after the procedure. As surgical recoveries go, that’s tough to beat.
A male horse had a (human fist sized) smegma stone… blocking the urethra. The idea is that its probably mostly smegma and dead skin and perhaps some reaction to the irritation it causes, such as calcification.
That’s why routine care of a male horse includes cleaning out urethral fossa (a pouch-like extension at the end of the urethra) from time to time. Fist-sized “beans” (as the lump of accumulated crud is called) are unusual, but even a smallish bean can cause irritation and urinary obstruction. Beans tend to more of a problem in geldings than in stallions. This may be because a stallion gets a lot of erections, which turn the fossa inside-out, releasing some of the gunk before it builds up.