Uncircumcised men may notice a small, v-shaped band of skin attaching the foreskin to the head of the penis. This is called the frenulum. If the frenulum is too short or tight, it can cause pain during erections. Learn more in our new video from Dr. Gideon Blecher.
Last few days to apply for the @GuysUrology robotic fellowship posts for October 2024 start. Longest running UK robotic fellowship. Biggest UK robotic programme. 5 da Vinci’s plus new robots. https://t.co/q02V4Ad1QT
@dr_wardsam@essm_tweets@NunoTomada Oh the patient quest for bigger is real. But those who have a penis which works - passes urine freely, erects easily and posseses normal sensation, have everything it should afford. The tough part is getting patients on board with that.
It’s high time we (urologists) manage fertility concerns at the time of testicular cancer treatment. Proud to publish our Australian data: Thanks to @john_bailie@androuro Darren Katz and Shannon Kim https://t.co/IwhGWAkvs3 @USANZUrology@MovemberAUS
Currently, any medical practitioner in Australia may call themselves a surgeon or cosmetic surgeon, without completing specialist surgical training. Your feedback will help determine if this needs to change.
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When Peyronie’s disease strikes, it affects so much more that the angle of the dangle. These vulnerable men need to know they are not alone and that treatments are available. For the evidence, see below ⬇️ #MensHealth@USANZUrology@ISSM_INFO
Latest #ESSM#PositionStatement on Surgical Treatment of #PeyroniesDisease! The choice of treatment depends on: the stage of the disease, the presence of pain, severity and direction of the curvature, penile length and the quality of #erectilefunction ➡️ https://t.co/qqfIzqBXtc