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#67
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07-15-2010, 05:02 PM
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Re: Lumbarectomy
I guess I'm a perv, but the first pic all I could think was "Damn at least he's got some big balls" He does look happy, but how does he ... work? You know piss & shit & so forth. And I wouldn't be so happy not having any bits. Bits are good ... If I can't have sex I don't see a point in living. Then again that dude did have some serious ass rot ... Yeah I'm gonna stop arguing with myself now... |
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#68
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07-16-2010, 09:50 PM
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| My Rank: PRIVATE Poster Rank:17288 Join Date: Jul 2010 Posts: 4 Mentioned: 1 Post(s) Quoted: 0 Post(s)
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Re: Lumbarectomy
Hello all. First post here. I see a lot of people asking the same questions again and again. They've all been answered piecemeal, but I figure I'll try to compile them into one concise post. For starters this man was was almost certainly a paraplegic before all this happened. There is evidence of this in the extreme atrophy of his legs. My guess is that he was left alone at home with nobody to assist him, or that he was being kept in a very bad hospital where the staff were highly neglectful. After staying in the same position for so long his circulation was hampered and he developed bedsores. The half of his body that was removed was effectively dead to him. No feeling and no movement possible. He may, perhaps, never miss it. As for the "bathroom" stuff... they have preformed on him a colostomy, in which a piece of the large intestine is re-routed to the outside of the lower abdomen, creating what is called a stoma. A colostomy bag is then placed over this exposed piece of intestine or stoma. Feces are passed through the stoma and into the bag. As for urination, they have most certainly inserted a catheter tube into the remaining length of his urethra. This catheter tube runs up into the bladder. Urine drains out of this tube and into a catheter bag. In fact, you can see a catheter bag in the pre-procedural pictures, and even one on the post-procedural picture of the severed lower half. (This is further evidence that he was a paraplegic prior to the bedsores and resulting surgery, as nearly all paraplegics require a catheter.) |