Many male friends know that their private parts need maintenance, so how to protect them? In the following article, the editor will provide a detailed introduction on how to protect male privacy.
The skin of a normal male penis is relatively thin, and the skin near the head of the penis folds inward into a double layer, covering the penis, known as the foreskin. There is slight adhesion between the foreskin and glans penis of newborns and infants. This adhesion gradually disappears until around one year old, and the foreskin and glans penis naturally separate. Therefore, it is not unusual for a child's foreskin to appear longer. If the penis head is still refused exposure during adolescence, or if it is tightly wrapped during childhood, we must be careful.
Phimosis and redundant prepuce are natural dysplasia. Phimosis refers to the condition where the opening of the foreskin is too small and the foreskin cannot be turned up to expose the glans penis; Phimosis refers to the condition where the foreskin covers all the glans penis, and the opening of the foreskin is not small enough to reveal a portion of the glans penis.
Just like all parts of the skin secrete sebum, the sebaceous glands of the foreskin also secrete sebum. Due to phimosis or foreskin that is too long, the foreskin cannot be flipped upwards, and this sebum will accumulate in the gap between the inside of the foreskin and the glans penis. At the same time, urine will also infiltrate into this gap and react with the sebum to become smegma. The smegma that has accumulated for a long time will become a hard lump and be mistaken for a tumor.
Smegma is a chemical carcinogen. Many experiments have confirmed that it has a strong carcinogenic effect, such as the smegma of stallion in mice, which can produce skin malignant tumors. Inoculating mice with smegma can also induce cervical cancer in female mice.
Under the prelude of phimosis and redundant prepuce, the variation climax of penis cancer will quietly appear behind the theme of smegma, which is a terrible climax, because penis cancer is a disease that will take away life. After the age of 50, inexplicable lumps gradually appear on the head of the penis, neither painful nor itchy, but resembling cauliflower, protruding from the surface of the penis and causing it to deform.
The surface of the lump can also ulcerate, with a foul odor and many secretions. As the disease progresses, the number of nearby lymph nodes increases, and cancer cells eventually metastasize to the liver and lungs, posing a threat to life. As this dangerous chain begins with phimosis and foreskin elongation, it must be cut before prevention. For example, Jews undergo circumcision on on the eighth day after birth, resulting in almost no penile cancer; The incidence rate of penile cancer was significantly reduced when Muslim Islamists performed circumcision within the age of 4 to 10 years.