Science 55% of trans women who have 'bottom surgery' are in so much pain they need medical care years later - and up to a third struggle to use the toilet

OP is a massive faggot that managed to break three seperate rules in one fucking post.

Half of trans surgery patients suffer extreme pain, sexual issues years later​

By Meike Leonard For Dailymail.Com 10:54 EST 16 Jan 2023 , updated 13:03 EST 16 Jan 2023

The hidden dangers of 'gender-affirming care': 55% of trans women who have 'bottom surgery' are in so much pain they need medical care years later - and up to a third struggle to use the toilet or have sex, study suggests​


More than half of trans women who have 'bottom' surgery are in so much pain years later they need medical attention, a study suggests.

Up to a third of patients also struggled to use the toilet or suffered sexual issues 12 months after the operation, which sees patients transitioning from male to female given a surgically constructed vagina.
Researchers from the Women's College Hospital (WCH) in Ontario, , the medical records of 80 patients who sought care from the clinic between three months and five years after having the operation.

Campaigners say the findings demonstrate that complex surgeries like vaginoplasty often carry risks that patients are unaware of - despite performed annually in the US.

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Of the 80 trans women sampled in the Canadian study, almost 54% reported ongoing pain up to two years after their vaginoplasty surgery. Many had more than one symptom, which included vaginal dryness, numbness, malodor and issues with the wound's healing
indicated the number of patients going under the knife increased more than 150-fold between 2010 and 2018.

It is thought that the reduced stigma and heightened awareness around trans issues have contributed to the rise.


In the latest study, Canadian researchers looked at the medical records of patients who sought care between 2018 and 2020 at WCH's newly opened Postoperative Care Clinic.

All 80 patients had the original vaginoplasty procedure outside of the Women's College health system but were experiencing symptoms that needed follow-up care.

Some had traveled as far as India and Thailand to have the operations, which the researchers say may explain the relatively high number of medical complaints.

The most common symptoms reported by post-op patients were pain (53.5 percent), bleeding (42.5 percent) and dilation issues (46.3 percent).

Severe side effects were much rarer, but in 12 cases - or 15 percent - patients experienced vaginal stenosis, the narrowing and shortening of the vagina.

In two other cases, patients had severe infections around the surgical site, and another two were hospitalized with mental health problems.

Much more common were minor outcomes like difficulty urinating (22.5 percent), sexual problems (33.8 percent), and poorly healing wounds (21.3 percent).

A total of 15 patients (18.8 percent) also told the clinic they were dissatisfied with the appearance of their new vulva and wanted some cosmetic revision.

Most complaints of ongoing pain were treatable with topical medication or more regular check-ups.

Although classified as 'minor' in medical records, many of these symptoms had the potential to grow into much more serious difficulties had patients not sought treatment, the study emphasized.

For this reason, 'surgical centers should be providing ongoing post-operative care, especially in the first year after surgery,' researchers urged.

This is especially crucial given the rise in popularity of the procedure in recent years and its high cost, which can push those seeking the surgery to cheaper and less well-regulated surgeons overseas.

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Bottom surgeries such as vaginoplasties and phalloplasties - genital reconstruction undergone by women transitioning to men - cost around $25,000.

'It is quite clear from the most up-to-date studies that vaginoplasty and other genital surgeries don’t work in the way that people hope they will,' says Stella O'Malley, psychotherapist and director of campaign group Genspect.

'The reason why there is so many problems is because this is an incredibly difficult surgery. Young vulnerable people need to know about the challenges they will face post surgery but few of them do.'

The latest study was published in the journal .

In Canada, the first country to collect and publish data on gender diversity from a national census, transgender individuals make up 0.33 percent of over-15s.

There are approximately transgender and non-binary adults living in the US, which makes up around 0.5 percent of the adult population.

Gender-affirmative care for US adults and adolescents can include a number of medical, behavioral and social changes, as well as surgery.

For adolescents who have not yet gone through puberty, puberty-blocking medication can suppress the release of the sex hormones testosterone and estrogen, which halts the development of secondary sex characteristics like breasts and facial hair.

Whether or not original puberty was blocked, trans adults and adolescents can also begin hormone therapy, which essentially initiates the puberty of their gender identity. These hormones can be taken as pills, patches and gels, and are taken continuously throughout adulthood, or until the desired physical traits are achieved.

Surgical options include facial, chest and genital altering procedures, and are generally the last step of the transition process.

According to the , anyone seeking bottom surgery is recommended to have completed certain criteria such as: reaching the age of adulthood in their location; having persistent, diagnosed gender dysphoria; having the capacity to make an informed decision; and completing 12 continuous months of hormone therapy while living the congruent gender identity.

Vaginoplasty - the procedure undergone by patients in the new study - is a particularly invasive procedure, requiring a surgery during which the penis and testicles are removed and a functional vagina is created.

The most common form of vaginoplasty is a Penile Inversion, whereby skin removed from the penis is inverted to form a pouch and inserted into a cavity created between the urethra and rectum. The urethra is then partially removed, shortened, and repositioned.

The surgery tends to take between two to five hours, and is done under general anesthesia.

For female-to-male genital reconstruction, doctors can construct a penis by using a flap of skin, fat, nerves and arteries - usually taken from the arm or thigh - and grafting it on to the groin. In some cases, surgeons will lengthen the urethra to allow for urination from the tip of the penis, or add testicle implants and an erectile device.

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I'm seriously starting to think that the tranny crisis has been completely instigated and is continually propagated by Big Pharma, not just because they can push hormones, but it's a new way to make patients for which long-term opiate prescriptions are allowable and "necessary."
 
Imagine, as a male, having a large channel drilled into your pelvis, surgically. There’s no space for this, it has to go up through structures and sit uneasily where it shouldnt be. It’s a large wound.
You must now keep that channel open. It must not heal closed. Your body wants it closed of course. But you must keep it open. By shoving a large piece of plastic into it, multiple times a day at first. Your existing genitalia were removed and played around with and stitched back on, with just hope that inner action and blood flow will be ok.
Now imagine that being pain free - is that likely? No.
Or imagine you’re a woman and your forearm is flayed, and the flesh rolled up and attached to your mons. Your vagina is burned closed. Your breasts are cut off. Is that pain free? Also no. For both sexes, the urethra needs re routing and oh the urethra is delicate. A huge number of FTMs get strictures and fistulas and infections. Repeated infections. A UTI when you’re twenty is a pain but UTIs are a significant cause of morbidity in the elderly and can and do kill.
The damage these surgeries cause is horrific. That only half are in pain a year on is surprising- I wonder how many still take painkillers a year on?
Here's the thing: Its an open wound. It is not a mucous membrane. We do not have the technology to craft new mucous membranes. It simply does not exist. The absolute lie is that this is a vagina is disgusting. It is quite literally an open wound. An open wound which you must perpetually keep open. Your body is comprised of an extremely large amount of systems to indicate that you are getting harmed and in need of repair. Pain sensation is incredibly important because damage results from sitting in one spot for too long or your head in a wrong position.

Now imagine every one of those sensors going off constantly. Your body reads this surgery as damaged tissue. It is treating it as damaged tissue. Your body does not give a shit if you think you are a woman. It reads your genetic code and responds like-wise. It is not going to suddenly and magically adapt or produce estrogen. The amount of shit you have to cut through and getting muscle tone is a fucking nightmare.

The problem is there are entire industries sprouting up, because this practice ensures an eternity of customers. So there's no incentive to correct opinions. Not to mention the hundreds of surgeons popping up offering this surgery and not all of them are qualified and many are just glorified butchers. The thing is that people offering this surgery get shielded by everyone, so good luck for malpractice.

This idea that they're 'real' female or male organs has permeated medical science to a disgusting degree. There was even this article that said the 'flora' of fake vaginas was TOTES SIMILAR to a REAL ONE! (Except you read the fine print and everything that makes the vagina a unique mucous membrane to women is conspicuously absent and does not exist in surgically created ones).

It didn't use to be like this. These surgeries were incredibly rare as they were basically a last resort, because they were riddled with complications. But now, they're handed out almost like candy. Nobody is allowed to even question the dogma that these surgeries are bad or only for a very very few cases. Even breast implants carry risks, so 'top' surgery isn't easily reversible either. And I would bet all of them. There's also incredibly delusional videos passing off bottom surgery pains as period pains and violations of the basic laws of biology and physics. To these people, it doesn't matter. They will embrace delusion if it means someone validates their fake feelings. That's all these people exist for, is constant validation.
I normally don't moralize on Kiwi Farms but this so incredibly cruel. Literal state sanctioned torture and mutilation of the mentally ill.

We are a fallen nation and people. There is very little worth saving or sacrificing for.
As always, the root of the evil is simple: Money. Cash money.

You're gender dysphoric? You need Gender Therapy. Now you need Pharmaceuticals (Hormones and Other Drugs). Now you need surgery. Now you need eternal post operative care and drugs. Regret the surgery? You're transphobic and need more therapy. Still regret it? Pay money to try and reverse the damage you did.

The flow of cash is fucking incredible. They can guarantee lifetime patients without any effort, and the patients themselves will defend them, even for massive fuckups, because they cannot tell the difference between fantasy and reality.
 
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Presumably the half not reporting pain have severed nerve endings? Presumably the 2 in 3 without sexual function concerns are celibate? Only 1 in 8 with mental health concerns??? That's half the national average... and so on... none of these figures ring true at all. It's as if almost half of the respondents didn't respond...
 
Medical science has come a long way, but still fails to grasp things like nerves, phantom pains, and the like. So why would you expect a perfect rewiring and replumbing of an area that has an absolutely massive amount of nerve endings and sense receptors? And it's not like this is some fucking unknown truth about the human body, if you've reached sexual maturity or am a male who's been kicked in the junk at least once; you understand exactly what sort of shit is going on down there. Then you decided to fucking cut it all up, rewire it, and pretend everything's going to be okay, when people who have lost limbs report feeling shit in the limb they no longer have. I'm honestly surprised the number is only in the 50s, I'd expect more.
 
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