A half-million vasectomies, a year, are performed in the USA alone. If there was much of a change in sexual performance, do you think all those men would get them?
There is no noticeable difference in consistency, color, texture, or quantity. Nothing is different. My girlfriend says there is no difference in taste, or smell.
The loss of the fear of unwanted children, actually makes sex more enjoyable, and will increase your sex drive.
It is entirely possible for a man to get a vasectomy, and no woman could ever know, unless she looked at his semen under a microscope.
There is no scar. In fact it completely heals in about a week. If a vasectomy was performed while you had been in a coma, you would never know about it (unless you tried to have children).
I got mine 20 years ago. I think I, or one of my partners, over the years, would have noticed any difference by now.
2007-05-02 20:30:11
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answer #1
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answered by Marvin 7
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The semen ejaculated after a vasectomy appears no different than that which is ejaculated prior to vasectomy. The only real difference is that it does not contain any sperm, which are too small to see anyway. It is important to note that after a vasectomy, a man has to ejaculate sometimes up to 50 times to make sure all the sperm are gone. Best wishes!
2007-05-02 16:36:23
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answer #2
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answered by fair blue 5
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A vasectomy merely stops the semen from coming out in the ejaculate. about 95% of ejaculate is stuff other than semen. From the look and feel, you or your partner would never know the difference. Same color, consistency, etc.
2007-05-02 16:35:01
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answer #3
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answered by John G 4
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He ejaculates the exact same seminal fluid as before the vasectomy but without any sperm (the microscopic tadpole looking things that make babies when they inseminate a human egg)......
Neither he nor she notices no difference whatsoever... and there is still a wetpatch to squable over... so relationships do not differ.... but there is a loss of the "fear" of an unwanted pregnancy... to that extent things a different.
2007-05-02 16:50:00
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answer #4
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answered by Icy Gazpacho 6
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A man ejaculates the same fluids that he always did except there is no sperm in them. It looks the same and feels the same.
2007-05-02 16:40:03
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answer #5
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answered by Neil L 6
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Most of the whitish color of semen comes from prostatic secretions. The sperm do not contribute much to the color, but some men report a slightly more "watery" or "lighter in color" semen after vasectomy. The myth that vasectomy has no effect on semen has been disproven by research on the semen of vasectomized men. See these abstracts: 1) The seminal plasma constituents of acid phosphatase, maltase, citric acid, prolactin, zinc and magnesium were measured in men vasectomized for 1-8 years. Compared with values obtained for a group of normal fertile men, all the constituents, except acid phosphatase which was unchanged, decreased significantly after vasectomy, but not progressively so. Since the constituents measured are believed to be of prostatic origin, the results suggest that vasectomy in men decreases the secretory function of the prostate gland. 2) In 56 males, vasectomized 8 years previously, and in 56 age-matched non-vasectomized controls, a number of secretory products of prostatic, seminal vesicular and epididymal/testicular origin were used to monitor post-operative changes in accessory sex gland function. Significant reductions were observed in seminal plasma volume (3.0 vs 4.9 ml, P less than 0.01), and the total ejaculate contents of zinc (5.1 vs 9.7 mumol, P less than 0.01), magnesium (10.6 vs 26.5 mumol, P less than 0.01), PAP (371 vs 1260 IU, P less than 0.005) and citric acid (76.7 vs 127.9 mumol, P less than 0.05), indicating a major impact on secretions of prostatic origin. 3) Several short- or long-term and longitudinal or cross-sectional studies have been conducted to ascertain the effect of vasectomy on circulating levels of gonadotropic and gonadal hormones and the function of assessory sex organs. Vasectomy does not cause noticeable changes in pituitary testicular axis. Changes, when they occur, are marginal and the hormone levels are still within normal physiological limits. The secretory function of both the prostate and the epididymis are changed as a result of vasectomy. There is a 2-fold increase in acid phosphatase in semen after vasectomy, indicating hyperfunction of the prostate. Both prostatic secretions and epididymal secretions decrease after vasectomy. 1 group of 12 men vasectomized for 1 week to 8 years were reanastomized (had a vasectomy reversal) and followed up for 12 months. Semen volume, seminal critic acid, maltase, glycerophosphorylcholine, prolactin, zinc, and magnesium returned to normal levels within 6 months, some within 1 month. So, don't let anyone tell you there is no difference....
2016-05-19 03:44:06
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answer #6
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answered by ? 3
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I think its still white, it's the same fluid that comes out before just minus the sperm, so you actually can't tell the difference.
2007-05-02 16:34:51
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answer #7
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answered by pinkmarie 2
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my husband had one, it looks the same, there is the same amount, it tastes the same, smells the same. The best part is NO BABIES!!!!! YEAH!!!!!!!
2007-05-02 18:38:00
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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it looks, tastes and feels just like it did before.
2007-05-02 16:42:07
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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it's the same...
2007-05-02 16:36:30
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answer #10
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answered by lv_consultant 7
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