Author Topic: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study  (Read 288054 times)

certainlypois2

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #260 on: May 09, 2016, 05:58:18 PM »
im in

demografx

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #261 on: May 09, 2016, 06:03:19 PM »
Thanks, CP2!
10 years of significant POIS-reduction, treatment consisting of daily (365 days/year) testosterone patches.

TRT must be checked out carefully with your doctor due to fertility, cardiac and other risks.

40+ years of severe 4-days-POIS, married, raised a family, started/ran a business

Quantum

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #262 on: May 09, 2016, 09:31:40 PM »
I'm in
You are 100% responsible for what you do with anything I post on this forum and of any consequence it could have for you.  Forum rule: ""Do not use POISCenter as a substitute for, or to give, medical advice" Read the remaining part at http://poiscenter.com/forums/index.php?topic=1.msg10259#msg10259

demografx

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #263 on: May 09, 2016, 09:43:05 PM »
Thanks, Quantum!
10 years of significant POIS-reduction, treatment consisting of daily (365 days/year) testosterone patches.

TRT must be checked out carefully with your doctor due to fertility, cardiac and other risks.

40+ years of severe 4-days-POIS, married, raised a family, started/ran a business

vik1379

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #264 on: May 11, 2016, 01:56:50 PM »
I am in

demografx

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #265 on: May 11, 2016, 10:48:09 PM »
Thanks, vik1379!
10 years of significant POIS-reduction, treatment consisting of daily (365 days/year) testosterone patches.

TRT must be checked out carefully with your doctor due to fertility, cardiac and other risks.

40+ years of severe 4-days-POIS, married, raised a family, started/ran a business

demografx

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #266 on: May 12, 2016, 03:12:53 PM »
I personally think that hormonal matters should also be studied.
I agree, but it's not directly being addressed by this particular group of researchers @ Rutgers in this first study.

Our $34,000 grant can only cover so much (a limited amount of) medical territory.

But there are known relationships between hormones and the vagus nerve -- the latter being the focus of the current study. I think there is a good reference for that - please check our "Testosterone" thread. The link to this specific post (#161):
http://poiscenter.com/forums/index.php?topic=17.msg17983#msg17983


« Last Edit: May 12, 2016, 04:15:05 PM by demografx »
10 years of significant POIS-reduction, treatment consisting of daily (365 days/year) testosterone patches.

TRT must be checked out carefully with your doctor due to fertility, cardiac and other risks.

40+ years of severe 4-days-POIS, married, raised a family, started/ran a business

joelawerence

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #267 on: May 13, 2016, 03:53:07 AM »
I am also IN for contributing to the server cost.
33 years old, POIS for around 12 years with increasing severity.
Major symptoms - Severe fatigue, back pain, unrefreshed even after 9+ hours sleep, pain behind eyes, very dry face, bald head with inflamed scalp, digestion issues and constipation. Very low testosterone and high glucose in blood tests

demografx

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #268 on: May 13, 2016, 04:45:54 AM »
Thanks, joelawerence!
10 years of significant POIS-reduction, treatment consisting of daily (365 days/year) testosterone patches.

TRT must be checked out carefully with your doctor due to fertility, cardiac and other risks.

40+ years of severe 4-days-POIS, married, raised a family, started/ran a business

demografx

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #269 on: May 13, 2016, 12:12:01 PM »


Let's all say...THANK YOU...for contributing to our

hosting fees!


COLM

Quantum

certainlypois2

vik1379

joelawerence








« Last Edit: May 13, 2016, 12:59:16 PM by demografx »
10 years of significant POIS-reduction, treatment consisting of daily (365 days/year) testosterone patches.

TRT must be checked out carefully with your doctor due to fertility, cardiac and other risks.

40+ years of severe 4-days-POIS, married, raised a family, started/ran a business

demografx

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #270 on: May 14, 2016, 02:16:08 PM »
Keep an eye on everyone demografx!

10 years of significant POIS-reduction, treatment consisting of daily (365 days/year) testosterone patches.

TRT must be checked out carefully with your doctor due to fertility, cardiac and other risks.

40+ years of severe 4-days-POIS, married, raised a family, started/ran a business

Pentrazemine

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #271 on: May 20, 2016, 03:21:45 PM »
Do you guys think - in either your laymen or formalized educated POV - that POIS will be 'curable', or for a better suitable word of progressive insights - be treatable by the end of the decade? I'm really looking for at least 2020 to have some line of formalized treatment.
...


POIS is a rare condition, so research for it will not go fast.  It is not a disease like cancer, diabetes, depression, or cardiovascular problems, that attracts billions of dollars of research found each years.  Remember that health is a "business" like any other.  Investors want a good ROI (Return on Investment) for the bucks they put in.  If you have the choice between investing in a very rare condition, or investing in a condition that has epidemic proportion, like diabetes, or cancer, what would YOU do with your money?   Same thing for the Government - If you pay for a public network of health services - hospitals, clinics, .... - you will invest funds where they will help the most people you have to provide care for, in order to lower your health system budget.  In many cases, follow the money, and you will find answers to many questions.

However, and that is our chance, their is other kind of "investors" for rare disorders.  First, those who are suffering from this rare disorder, and that is what made this current Rutgers study possible.  Also, their is interest from the part of world-class specialists of a very specific field - in this case, sexual dysfunctions.  If you are a world-class researcher in this field, it may become redundant to make yet another study on premature ejaculation - there are already so many!  There comes a time that you, or some of your PhD candidates, want something fresh, some uncharted territory to explore, and take a chance at becoming the first to make a breakthrough in a rare condition.  That is an "investment" in a career path.  So, prominent figures like Dr Waldinger or Dr Kamisaruk, and the team surrounding them, will be interested in conducting studies about a rare disorder like POIS.

If you feel that this is not enough, don't forget that POIS can benefit from research on other health problems.  MrRaba has already cited research done for CFS/ME,  that could lead to interesting results for POIS.  Personally, all that I have learned about the IDO and TDO enzymes upregulating in immune reactions, that I believe explains a part of what causes POIS, come from millions of dollars of researches done for two "blockbusters" conditions,  cancer and depression.  Those two has attracted many millions of dollars of research money on the study of the kynurenine pathways, something impossible for a rare condition.  Just check the amazing numbers of study about this that can be found on NCBI/PUBMED for that, 7027 full-text journal articles if you type "IDO",   over 4000 if you type "kynurenine".  And this is not a mainstream subject in research for those 2 conditions.  POIS can benefit from what is learned in studies for other conditions, so count on that too.


It doesn't matter. You have rarer diseases and (or) congenital diseases with, presumably, a far less and selectively small amount of people that get more spotlight and research than our syndrome; there are millions - I repeat: millions - of doctors and (or) medical researchers / scientists world-wide. You would think 14 years would be more than enough time to mathematically increases the chances of getting at least 20 scientists to take interest, let alone just one's you can count on one hand.

14 years since its formal inception and just what? 1-3 researchers out of millions of others? Why we have to rely on a forum to actually discuss treatments through the dangerous, informal process of Trial and Error? It doesn't matter if it was just 1 case. It makes absolutely no sense.

For something as medically unorthodox and original in premise - people suffering from neurological and systemic changes in their body post-orgasm and this is STILL not well talked about? Are you effing kidding me? Even Dr. House himself would salivate at the unique originality and mysteriousness of this condition with much delight.

I'm sorry but I don't buy the money / resource excuse just as much as I don't buy the capital of scientific curiosity as a form of financial value; this is something that should've been long studied and researched on since the early 00's. Hand in hand with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome and Dysautonomia.

By the way and how slow research is going with the inexplicable lack of spotlight - I can't conceivably see this being treated until mid-to-late of the 21st century, and that's being generous. And quite frankly, as a 44 year old I neither have the time nor the inclination anymore to bother with a cure if we have to wait that long. We still can't cure CFS effectively and we spend millions if not billions on that. Just imagine how much we spend on this 'POIS' and just imagine the chronology. Laughable. 

Waldinger's vagus nerve theory is a shot in the dark but it's our golden ticket to possible success - if his theory later proves to be successful in the next year or so that's our chance; but if nothing suffices out of that theory in particular...we're literally back at square one.  And no, forum theories don't count. Because there's simply too little researchers egging in on this thing and I have extreme doubt that it'll get cured until most of us are either in our Seniors or dead. He's literally our only hope. without him or the fate of his research, I cannot conceivably see this thing being cured until the later half of the end of the century.


demografx

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #272 on: May 20, 2016, 03:41:50 PM »
"Waldinger's vagus nerve theory"??
10 years of significant POIS-reduction, treatment consisting of daily (365 days/year) testosterone patches.

TRT must be checked out carefully with your doctor due to fertility, cardiac and other risks.

40+ years of severe 4-days-POIS, married, raised a family, started/ran a business

Pentrazemine

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #273 on: May 20, 2016, 08:36:05 PM »
Sorry, I meant . Komisaruk. Regardless, the fact that you're only responding my post to that little tidbit and not to the general subject of my critiquing is a sign that you know I'm right. We're not going to be alive when this thing gets formally treated, or perhaps, we will be but many of us will simply be too old to bother with it. I would bet all of my life savings that this won't be formally treated until past the 2050's decade, and that's being generous given it's been already 14 years and doctors still - for whatever bizarre reason - don't know about it, even behind the desk let alone behind the doctor's office. You're all great and intelligent people here, no doubt, but you need to be realistic about this. I don't want to discuss this on a forum. I want to discuss this in an actual doctor's office with actual M.D's and not Laymen. If Laymen have more exciting theories and conjure more ad hoc knowledge on a condition than actual doctors after 14 years...you know something is terribly, terribly wrong.
« Last Edit: May 20, 2016, 08:40:35 PM by Pentrazemine »

FloppyBanana

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #274 on: May 21, 2016, 06:07:51 AM »
Sorry, I meant . Komisaruk. Regardless, the fact that you're only responding my post to that little tidbit and not to the general subject of my critiquing is a sign that you know I'm right. We're not going to be alive when this thing gets formally treated, or perhaps, we will be but many of us will simply be too old to bother with it. I would bet all of my life savings that this won't be formally treated until past the 2050's decade, and that's being generous given it's been already 14 years and doctors still - for whatever bizarre reason - don't know about it, even behind the desk let alone behind the doctor's office. You're all great and intelligent people here, no doubt, but you need to be realistic about this. I don't want to discuss this on a forum. I want to discuss this in an actual doctor's office with actual M.D's and not Laymen. If Laymen have more exciting theories and conjure more ad hoc knowledge on a condition than actual doctors after 14 years...you know something is terribly, terribly wrong.

Hi Pentrazemine,

I take your point but perhaps I can try and share something positive in reflection of reading some of your post. Me personally I am going through a very difficult time with POIS at the moment and can't handle the stress at work. It is so tough. Anyhow perhaps there is a positive way to look at this. There has only been a couple of completed POIS studies from Waldinger. I don't think we can count Dr Dexters and also Goldmeiers as they are shallow insights and only observational. Waldinger's first one was fruitless as well really and only observational. However in my limited opinion his papers of desensitisation is a break through, although only useful for people who have a POIS type which is related to IgE immune response. So we actually have quite a high progress rate (50% = one step forward).

The problem with many conditions is being able to catch when something is going wrong until it is too late as they don't know the trigger is. For POIS we can trigger this condition whenever we choose. So this is great in terms of finding a comparable state. Some medical conditions are happening all the time and whats causing it can be thus harder to find in some ways. For example, we have thousands of IgG markers in our bodies and some people do not have any health problems with them but other people do.

As I have recently mentioned and believed for a long time that the O in POIS in incorrect and it should be called SIS (Semen Illness Syndrome)! Why? Because I know I can trigger POIS without shooting and thus I strongly believe orgasm is not the cause.

When I take an ACH blocker (Mytelase or mestinon) it can stimulate semen production, especially if I take in the morning (so I don't that anymore). There is absolutely no sexual arousal is this case. The strange thing is that the only time I have ever been what I believe to experience no POIS was when taking Mytelase. So it a double edged sword. But surely this discovery is meaningful. To me it is clear that ACh reduction is one of the biggest causes of POIS symptoms (well at least my type of POIS). I was a little bit disappointed that neither Dr K or Waldinger confirmed receipt of my mail explaining this discovery.

We know there was an individual who went to great lengths to have parts removed from his body to try to stop POIS. I do know from speaking with him not too long ago that it didn't work, despite the the youtube video which paints a totally different story. Well at least we know that it's not worth doing what he did, especially the removal of his testes! So why do I mention this? Because after having all that surgery he still got POIS. I do know that the procedure that he had done to remove the prostate was called a TURP. This does not remove the prostate fully. It cuts/burns sections of it away. What this means is that the prostate will grow back and also if any not removed it could still produce fluid. I know my my Mytelase experience that it only takes the tiniest bit of semen to trigger POIS. The first day is not the same as if having full sex but it still escalates to the same point soon after a day or two.

So if the antigen is in the prostate fluid then the only way (not absolute) to potentially stop the cause would be to have the prostate completely removed. THIS IS AN EXTREMELY SERIOUS OPERATION. In the not so distant past it was known to be when you had prostate cancer that the cure (the operation) was worse than the disease. Sexual function gone due to unknown nerves being cut and incontinence. The good news is that it has come a long way in the last ten years or so. There is a doctor in the US who developed a new technical and innovative procedure and is having amazing results. The procedure is called "laparoscopic nerve sparing radical prostatectomy". I saw on internet that some guy ran marathon 6 months after having this operation!

So are you going to be able to get this done now. NO. Why? Because no-one can prove scientifically that POIS exists. Thus no way to separate the genuine from the crazy or desperate (I'm all these categories at the moment). I would be surprised if Dr K can't prove that POIS exists. He has already indicated that there are changes in heart rate variability. There is also Waldinger's recent study which I would have thought would be finished by now:

http://poiscenter.com/forums/index.php?topic=2099.msg19041#msg19041

If either proves that the antigen is in the prostate then that would be another breakthrough.

So, best case scenario; both Dr K and Waldinger prove that POIS exists. Waldinger could any time cos no-one knows what the hell he is doing. Dr K could prove PIOS exists by March 2017. My logic here is that study is completed by end of September as planned then needs to peer reviewed. Thats' just ten months away.

For me if we can get to this point with just one of them with the medical proof then I would use this to try and get the "laparoscopic nerve sparing radical prostatectomy". I want this done even if there was a chance that it would not stop POIS. Why? Because I know from researching that having this operation would prevent the strong sexual urge which comes from the prostate getting very full. Sex is apparently less satisfying in a sense but still can be enjoyable (for a normal person). One of the problems I have is that cardio exercise fills up my prostate so I don't do any. At least if I had this op then I could go running and not feel uncontrollably frustrated a few hours afterwards.

I hope this all doesn't seem to extreme. I have had severe POIS for 27 years now.

Oh, yes and one last things; perhaps the tVNS nerve stimulator can provide considerable relief! Getting the damn thing could be the next challenge though.
 
FB






30 years of POIS. Mytelase after O with Iceman breathing technique.

FloppyBanana

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #275 on: May 21, 2016, 06:23:24 AM »
I'll submit questions you have here to NORD.

Daveman and I only know what you see above.

Hi Demo,

Did you get a response?
FB
30 years of POIS. Mytelase after O with Iceman breathing technique.

Pentrazemine

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #276 on: May 21, 2016, 09:22:06 AM »
Sorry, I meant . Komisaruk. Regardless, the fact that you're only responding my post to that little tidbit and not to the general subject of my critiquing is a sign that you know I'm right. We're not going to be alive when this thing gets formally treated, or perhaps, we will be but many of us will simply be too old to bother with it. I would bet all of my life savings that this won't be formally treated until past the 2050's decade, and that's being generous given it's been already 14 years and doctors still - for whatever bizarre reason - don't know about it, even behind the desk let alone behind the doctor's office. You're all great and intelligent people here, no doubt, but you need to be realistic about this. I don't want to discuss this on a forum. I want to discuss this in an actual doctor's office with actual M.D's and not Laymen. If Laymen have more exciting theories and conjure more ad hoc knowledge on a condition than actual doctors after 14 years...you know something is terribly, terribly wrong.

Hi Pentrazemine,

I take your point but perhaps I can try and share something positive in reflection of reading some of your post. Me personally I am going through a very difficult time with POIS at the moment and can't handle the stress at work. It is so tough. Anyhow perhaps there is a positive way to look at this. There has only been a couple of completed POIS studies from Waldinger. I don't think we can count Dr Dexters and also Goldmeiers as they are shallow insights and only observational. Waldinger's first one was fruitless as well really and only observational. However in my limited opinion his papers of desensitisation is a break through, although only useful for people who have a POIS type which is related to IgE immune response. So we actually have quite a high progress rate (50% = one step forward).

The problem with many conditions is being able to catch when something is going wrong until it is too late as they don't know the trigger is. For POIS we can trigger this condition whenever we choose. So this is great in terms of finding a comparable state. Some medical conditions are happening all the time and whats causing it can be thus harder to find in some ways. For example, we have thousands of IgG markers in our bodies and some people do not have any health problems with them but other people do.

As I have recently mentioned and believed for a long time that the O in POIS in incorrect and it should be called SIS (Semen Illness Syndrome)! Why? Because I know I can trigger POIS without shooting and thus I strongly believe orgasm is not the cause.

When I take an ACH blocker (Mytelase or mestinon) it can stimulate semen production, especially if I take in the morning (so I don't that anymore). There is absolutely no sexual arousal is this case. The strange thing is that the only time I have ever been what I believe to experience no POIS was when taking Mytelase. So it a double edged sword. But surely this discovery is meaningful. To me it is clear that ACh reduction is one of the biggest causes of POIS symptoms (well at least my type of POIS). I was a little bit disappointed that neither Dr K or Waldinger confirmed receipt of my mail explaining this discovery.

We know there was an individual who went to great lengths to have parts removed from his body to try to stop POIS. I do know from speaking with him not too long ago that it didn't work, despite the the youtube video which paints a totally different story. Well at least we know that it's not worth doing what he did, especially the removal of his testes! So why do I mention this? Because after having all that surgery he still got POIS. I do know that the procedure that he had done to remove the prostate was called a TURP. This does not remove the prostate fully. It cuts/burns sections of it away. What this means is that the prostate will grow back and also if any not removed it could still produce fluid. I know my my Mytelase experience that it only takes the tiniest bit of semen to trigger POIS. The first day is not the same as if having full sex but it still escalates to the same point soon after a day or two.

So if the antigen is in the prostate fluid then the only way (not absolute) to potentially stop the cause would be to have the prostate completely removed. THIS IS AN EXTREMELY SERIOUS OPERATION. In the not so distant past it was known to be when you had prostate cancer that the cure (the operation) was worse than the disease. Sexual function gone due to unknown nerves being cut and incontinence. The good news is that it has come a long way in the last ten years or so. There is a doctor in the US who developed a new technical and innovative procedure and is having amazing results. The procedure is called "laparoscopic nerve sparing radical prostatectomy". I saw on internet that some guy ran marathon 6 months after having this operation!

So are you going to be able to get this done now. NO. Why? Because no-one can prove scientifically that POIS exists. Thus no way to separate the genuine from the crazy or desperate (I'm all these categories at the moment). I would be surprised if Dr K can't prove that POIS exists. He has already indicated that there are changes in heart rate variability. There is also Waldinger's recent study which I would have thought would be finished by now:

http://poiscenter.com/forums/index.php?topic=2099.msg19041#msg19041

If either proves that the antigen is in the prostate then that would be another breakthrough.

So, best case scenario; both Dr K and Waldinger prove that POIS exists. Waldinger could any time cos no-one knows what the hell he is doing. Dr K could prove PIOS exists by March 2017. My logic here is that study is completed by end of September as planned then needs to peer reviewed. Thats' just ten months away.

For me if we can get to this point with just one of them with the medical proof then I would use this to try and get the "laparoscopic nerve sparing radical prostatectomy". I want this done even if there was a chance that it would not stop POIS. Why? Because I know from researching that having this operation would prevent the strong sexual urge which comes from the prostate getting very full. Sex is apparently less satisfying in a sense but still can be enjoyable (for a normal person). One of the problems I have is that cardio exercise fills up my prostate so I don't do any. At least if I had this op then I could go running and not feel uncontrollably frustrated a few hours afterwards.

I hope this all doesn't seem to extreme. I have had severe POIS for 27 years now.

Oh, yes and one last things; perhaps the tVNS nerve stimulator can provide considerable relief! Getting the damn thing could be the next challenge though.
 
FB




It's funny you should mention changing the name from POIS to SIS - I was actually in thoughts of maybe changing it to Post Orgasmic Illness Spectrum, and not even Syndrome; many people's Etiologies are simply diverse and different, and like you said, the 'trigger' is the same but the mechanisms are versatile and vary in nature. Some people need X drug while others need Y drug, while another person needs Z and Y, etc.  And like your opinion, I also don't believe this 'syndrome' is caused by orgasm - but by the stuff / biochemical synthesis inside the seminal fluid and (or) semen. At least, this goes for OUR particular case. Some people's 'strain' are caused immunologically, some are more inflammatory, some might be neurological, etc.

My POIS is strictly Neurological in terms of Symptoms  - not cause.  Unlike most people here, I suffer absolutely zero physical symptoms, I have no fatigue. But I suffer from debilitating cognitive / behavioral deficits and my vision gets blurry and photosensitive.

And unlike most people here, my symptoms last entirely for 1 Month and not 1 week. It spontaneously disappears after 1 month. I also get POIS symptoms proportionate to how sick I am. Ie: the severity of my sickness [ie: cold, fever, etc] is proportionate to the severity of my symptoms. The more sick / immune compromised I am - the more I get the symptoms. How often do you see someone with my 'strain' on this forum? You see, being anecdotal, this is also the problem with finding the cause. It's malleable.

Also, I don't know if this is the user you're referring to but a guy named Animus back in 2011 had the TARP removal, cauterized his ejaculatory ducts, had his seminal vesicles removed and he's enjoying / enjoyed 100% free symptoms. So surgically, it's a possible solution but to find a doctor willing to mutilate you to alleviate your suffering is extremely improbable.

Even if POIS were hypothetically 'legitimized' by the 2017 year given the stubbornness of bureaucracy and epistemology transitioning, I doubt doctors will still know much about it unless the big-time Media got involved and  (or) some people spent their days throwing POIS Fliers across Hospital lobby's all over their country. I'm surprised no one has done the latter yet. 

And given, like you said, the nerve fragility of the nature of the operation I don't think doctors would be too helpful in the mutilation of your nether-regions for an already ambiguous, yet simultaneously, proven condition. Even after 14 years, by doctor's and researchers eyes, this is still too 'new' of a condition to take such risks. I Live in New York City and I've went to maybe 6 Urologists and they've all rejected both my condition and my surgical desires.

So for you, surgery at the point of recognition / legitimacy should still not be on the tables. But consider this a blessing in disguise for alternative treatments that they can use w/o bodily mutilation.

Whoever can synthesize a drug that can destroy / eradicate seminal fluid production wins my heart...because for some of us a drug like that could be our golden ticket.

It's also equally mind boggling that researchers can't just set up grand openings for POIS sufferers all across the country and pool as much as they can and emulate the expositions of their illnesses seen here on this forum. Like I said, by the way research is going and how little doctors still don't know about, I'm still placing my money that this is something that won't be cured until the later-half of the century. The etiology quantification is too spread out / diversified amongst researchers..there's no over-arching organization, there's no proper, formalized Epistemology. This is more proto-science than an actual science.

at least the sufferers who are  kids in their Teens to 20's have a chance of a cure by the time they reach my age - mid 40's. lulz.

demografx

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #277 on: May 21, 2016, 11:02:14 AM »
I'll submit questions you have here to NORD.

Daveman and I only know what you see above.

Hi Demo,

Did you get a response?
FB

I went directly to Dr K, who replied that he promises to reply but that he cannot respond at the moment and that he will explain why.
10 years of significant POIS-reduction, treatment consisting of daily (365 days/year) testosterone patches.

TRT must be checked out carefully with your doctor due to fertility, cardiac and other risks.

40+ years of severe 4-days-POIS, married, raised a family, started/ran a business

FloppyBanana

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #278 on: May 25, 2016, 10:23:59 AM »
Hi Demo,

I hope you can help me with another question; when the study is completed at the end of September. It I expect will need to be peer review before being published. When the study is complete prior to peer review will the 12 participators who used the tVNS devices be allowed to share their experiences?

I'm looking forward to hearing about this almost as much as the publishing of the final paper. If you don't could you clarify with Prof K?

I hope this is not too much to ask!

Thanks FloppyB
« Last Edit: May 25, 2016, 01:03:34 PM by FloppyBanana »
30 years of POIS. Mytelase after O with Iceman breathing technique.

FloppyBanana

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Re: NORD Interim Report for POIS Study
« Reply #279 on: May 25, 2016, 10:50:26 AM »
Also, I don't know if this is the user you're referring to but a guy named Animus back in 2011 had the TARP removal, cauterized his ejaculatory ducts, had his seminal vesicles removed and he's enjoying / enjoyed 100% free symptoms. So surgically, it's a possible solution but to find a doctor willing to mutilate you to alleviate your suffering is extremely improbable.

Let's be clear here Animus has never had a 100% POIS free condition despite what that video states. That video should be taken off the internet because it painting a very distorted reality. I can't discuss the details of I how know due to confidentiality really. From what I know the "whole" story is very sad one.

I think you must mean TURP? I was not aware that he had his ejaculatory ducts cauterized. Where did you get this information?

Thanks FB
30 years of POIS. Mytelase after O with Iceman breathing technique.