Prostate Massage Technique
One prostate massage technique is generally used for treating prostatitis, which is the infection and/or inflammation of the prostate. The goal of this prostate massage technique: fluid release.
Prostate Massage Technique: How It Became Unpopular
Many doctors believe that the prostate massage technique is obsolete. These doctors prefer to work with antibiotics. The problem is that less than 10% of prostatitis cases are caused by bacteria, which is what antibiotics fight.
So in 90% of cases, it is likely that the suffering patient will be told to give the area a warm bath and just wait out the pain and discomfort until it disappears by itself.
If the patient happens to find a doctor who practices the prostate massage technique, he may be faced with another problem: most health plans don?t cover regular prostate massage therapy!
What?s even sadder is that the advantages of the prostate massage technique have been well documented in Western medical practice for a hundred years. But the practice seemed to wane simply because nobody bothered to publish enough statistical data on it.
Other factors that made the technique scarce were the difficulty doctors had in extracting fluid as well as the mode of massage, which was (understandably) not too popular with both doctors and patients alike.
In most cases, the only option left for the chronic prostatitis patient is to perform the prostate massage technique on himself.
How to Do the Prostate Massage Technique
What you need: sterile surgical gloves, pillow, KY or anesthetic jelly.
Warning: This procedure should only be performed if prostatitis is NOT caused by bacterial infection (consult your doctor). Performing this on an infected prostate may cause infection to spread.
1. Urinate and/or move your bowels before proceeding.
2. Trim your fingernails, removing jagged edges.
3. Lay on your side in fetal position with legs bent.
4. To help relax your muscles, put a pillow between your legs.
5. Lubricate your gloved hand with jelly.
6. Insert a finger into your anal canal.
7. Move upwards and towards your navel.
8. The tiny, round, walnut-like bulb is your prostate.
9. Massage your prostate along the edges.
(Warning: Do not let your nails hit. Do not press the center too hard as it has sensitive nerves.)
10. Feeling like you want to urinate is a natural reaction. Ignore it and proceed.
11. Your prostate gland should be stimulated to ejaculate after some minutes.
12. The average is 4 to 5 drops, but a dozen drops is normal.
Note that this particular prostate massage technique isn?t always successful.
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