Bamma say Anna Nova the first to discover condtion. Bamma say name disease after her. Bamma say this happen rare occasion. Bamma say 24 hour a day. Bamma say never lose keys. Bamma say one prisoner let out cause of it. Bamma say he no imagine such a thing. Bamma say they invent pink pill to cure it. Bamma say keep away from Hue. Bamma say imagine having 4 french maid wives. Bamma say lucky guy. Bamma otta know.
2007-01-09 14:23:07
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes it has happened and it is extremely painful. What happens is the blood remains in the penis and there is no way to mend the problem except surgically cutting into the stiff member to let the blood escape.
That itself is painful, but not as painful as a permanent erection. A permanent erection may be fun for the first thirty minutes but if it continues into the hours you are in for a painful time.
2007-01-10 03:26:11
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answer #2
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answered by the old dog 7
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Naturally, no - I've only heard of one case in which a man got 'stuck' in a woman for several hours and they had to go to the hospital.
Even with Viagra or Cialis the erection eventually passes. Personally the longest time I've held an erection was about six hours - at which point it was really starting to ache... was fun though... very 'romantic' day for me and my lady.
One can have a penile implant, which could be used to maintain a permanent erection - but pissing in your own face would kinda suck...
Just my .01
-dh
2007-01-09 14:20:19
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answer #3
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answered by delicateharmony 5
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Yes, it's called Priapism and can be dangerous
Priapism (Greek πριαπισμός, erection) is a painful and potentially harmful medical condition in which the erect penis does not return to its flaccid state (despite the absence of both physical and psychological stimulation) within four hours.
Priapism is a medical emergency and needs proper treatment by a qualified medical practitioner.
2007-01-10 03:45:47
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answer #4
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answered by bad_bob_69 7
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The medical term for a permanent erection is:
priapism /pri·a·pism/ (pri´ah-pizm) - persistent abnormal erection of penis, accompanied by pain and tenderness.
Priapism is a painful and potentially harmful medical condition in which the erect penis does not return to its flaccid state (despite the absence of both physical and psychological stimulation) within 4 hours. Priapism is a medical emergency and needs proper treatment by a qualified medical practitioner.
Causes
The causative mechanisms are poorly understood but involve complex neurological and vascular factors. Priapism may be associated with haematological disorders, especially sickle-cell disease, and other conditions such as leukaemia, thalassemia, and Fabry's disease, and neurologic disorders such as spinal cord lesions and spinal cord trauma (priapism has been reported in hanging victims).
Priapism can be caused by medications. Most common medications to cause priapism are intracavernous injections for treatment of erectile dysfunction (papaverine, alprostadil). Other groups reported are antihypertensives, antipsychotics (e.g chlorpromazine, clozapine), antidepressants (most notably trazodone), anticoagulants, and recreational drugs (alcohol and cocaine). Phosphodiesterase type-5 (PDE5) inhibitors such as sildenafil (popularly Viagra), tadalafil and vardenafil have very rarely been implicated, and probably do not cause priapism.
Complications
Potential complications include ischaemia, clotting of the blood retained in the penis (thrombosis), and damage to the blood vessels of the penis which may result in an impaired erectile function or impotence. In serious cases the condition may result in gangrene, which may necessitate penis removal.
Treatment
Medical advice should be sought immediately for cases of erection beyond 4 hours. Generally, this is done at an emergency department. The therapy at this stage is to aspirate blood from the corpus cavernosum under local anaesthetic. If this is still insufficient, then intra-cavernosal injections of phenylephrine are administered. This should only be performed by a trained urologist, with the patient under constant hemodynamic monitoring, as phenylephrine can cause severe hypertension, bradycardia, tachycardia, and arrythmia. If aspiration fails and tumescence re-occurs, surgical shunts are next attempted. These attempt to reverse the priapic state by shunting blood from the rigid corpora cavernosa into the corpus spongiosum (which contains the glans and the urethra). Distal shunts are the first step, followed by more proximal shunts.
Distal shunts, such as the Winter's, involves puncturing the glans (the distal part of the penis) into one of the cavernosa, where the old, stagnant blood is held. This causes the blood to leave the penis and return to the circulation. This procedure can be performed by a urologist at the bedside.
Proximal shunts, such as the Quackel's, are more involved and entail operative dissection in the perineum to where the corpora meet the spongiosum, making and incision in both, and suturing both openings together.
The name comes from the god Priapus, referring to that god's most notable attribute: ironically and pertinently one version of the Priapus myth has Priapus punished by the gods for attempting to rape a goddess by being given a huge but useless set of wooden genitals. The female counterpart of this condition is known as clitorism.
2007-01-09 14:21:31
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answer #5
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answered by Ivy 3
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No, after 5 hours the pain becomes so bad that if you don't go to the hospital and receive medication, permanent damage to the penis could result making future erections impossible.
2007-01-09 14:18:41
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Para aquellos que sufren de disfunción eréctil recomendaría probar este prootto naturales innovatio que es verdaderamente milagroso http://mejorarereccion.info
Muchos hombres son ocasionalmente expuestos a las dificultades de erección y esta experiencia se vive psicológicamente de una manera muy negativa.
Una erección es un complejo de respuesta fisiológica que depende de unos mecanismos de integración sin fisuras de vascular, endocrino y neurológico. I indicaron que el producto es ciertamente capaz de garantizar una erección perfecta.
2014-11-21 06:11:05
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answer #7
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answered by Aldith 2
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1
2017-03-01 05:21:33
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answer #8
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answered by ? 3
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Actually there was a guy who had one from a medical procedure that will never go away. He didn't seem to like it at all.
2007-01-09 14:18:45
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answer #9
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answered by Jerry H 2
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Personally, I like my on/off feature.
2007-01-09 14:18:46
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answer #10
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answered by Quibish 5
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