Contraception

Vasectomía del Laser

Una vasectomía es básicamente una operación simple que hace a hombre incapaz biológico engendrar a un niño. Se hace qué es simplemente el corte o bloqueo de los tubos del vaso, a través de los cuales las espermas viajan, de modo que la esperma no pueda pasar a través de ellos más, y la eyaculación del hombre contenga puramente el semen de modo que él no pueda hacer a una mujer embarazada. En fin, es una operación que bloquea los tubos que el paso de la esperma a través en el semen.

Toda esta información se sabe más comunmente, pero qué sobre la vasectomía del laser que ahora es el un excedente preferido la manera tradicional de la incisión de la vasectomía. ¿Cuál es una vasectomía del laser?

Vasectomía del Laser

Different Vasectomy Techniques

Close to 500,000 men each year in the United States opt for a more permanent form of birth control called the vasectomy. This surgical procedure is the preferred method as it is safe, does not affect the sex drive and it is virtually 100% effective.

A urologist is a type of doctor that takes care of a man's reproductive system and is usually the one who performs the vasectomy. There are several techniques the doctor may use depending on the circumstances, success rate of a procedure and even a preference of one over the other. The one technique that is gaining ground in vasectomies is the NSV method or no-scalpel vasectomy although the traditional way is just as effective.

No Needle

Tubal Ligation Vs. Vasectomy

The two most popular forms of surgical birth control are the vasectomy for men and the tubal ligation for women. These procedures are very effective at rendering a man or woman sterile however there is some debate on whether it is easier for the man or the woman to undergo their respective procedure. Which operation is easier to recover from? Who should be ultimately responsible for birth control – the man or the woman?

Communication is of key importance and both men and women must discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each procedure to come up with a viable plan for permanent birth control. It is important to understand what each procedure entails, the recovery time, the cost, health risks involved and side effects from the surgery as well. These factors will all play into making the best decision for a couple's lifestyle.

Comparison of the Vasectomy and Tubal Ligation

A Brief History of the Condom

Did you know that condoms have been around for thousands of years? The first use was plausibly as far back as 950 B.C. That year has been estimated to be its beginning because of paintings found in Egypt from those times depicting condoms being used. There were also paintings in Europe showing early use but not as long as ago as that. It is believed they began to use them between the first and second centuries.

The word condom comes from the Latin word condus, meaning container or vessel. This entails the concept that it was used to hold something in it. In some places early ones were made from leather while others they were made out of animal intestines. In Japan the early ones were made from leather or tortoise shells.

Enemy Battle Prizes

The Birth Control Pill

The most commonly used non-surgical method of contraception in the United States is the birth control pill with over ten million women currently making use of it.

The fact is that when it first came out in the 1960s it was a taste of freedom for women who had found the other methods they had to use less convenient, more of a hassle and more disruptive to their sex life.

These other methods were also not as effective as what the Pill promised to be. The Pill was their answer. It works because of two types of hormones. One is estrogen and the other is progestogen. The purpose of this mix of hormones is to prevent a woman from ovulating. If she does not ovulate there is no egg and so there can be no pregnancy.

It also works to make the mucus thicker in the cervix which prevents the sperm from travelling and finally it thickens the wall of the womb to make it harder for an egg to attach. With these three steps the Pill is ninety nine percent effective.

FDA Action

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