Covid can affect ANY organ that relies on blood supply.

Viper1j

Diamond Member
Jul 31, 2018
4,169
3,645
136
Yes, THAT one too :D
Perhaps, yet another reason to wear a mask?


Yes, Covid Penis Is a Thing
Some men say Covid-19 is hitting them below the belt

When Steven Bell caught Covid-19 this spring, he was surprised that he didn’t have a fever. Rather, it felt like a bad sinus infection. Soon, he lost his sense of smell, and went on to develop insomnia. He felt like the virus was also affecting his circulation, and would swing his arms in circles to keep the blood flowing. Then, more bafflingly, when he and his wife were intimate, he couldn’t get an erection. “It was frustrating and infuriating for me, because I knew it wasn’t working the way it should,” said Bell, a 49-year-old from Phoenix, AZ.

“My ego wouldn’t accept that I was performing like an 80-year-old in the bedroom.”

Some men who have survived Covid-19 say that the virus may have impacted their ability to get or maintain an erection. That tracks with the idea that Covid-19 is a vascular disease, which Elemental senior writer Dana Smith explained at length in May, as blood flow is important for getting or maintaining an erection. Erectile dysfunction can occur at any age — and becomes more common as men get older — and may affect up to a third of all men. In the context of Covid-19, men as young as 39 have been documented to experience erectile dysfunction as they recovered from the virus.
“In order to have really great sex, you have to be able to relax. The pandemic just makes that exceedingly difficult for many people.”
Currently, there are a handful of anecdotal reports, but no hard data nor large-scale study that documents the link, if any, between Covid-19 and erectile dysfunction. But for the men experiencing such issues, they’re convinced that the erectile dysfunction was caused by the novel coronavirus, because they never had issues with arousal or performance during sex prior to contracting the virus. Hunter Wessells, MD, a urologist at the University of Washington School of Medicine, urges other practitioners to collect this data on their patients. “It’s important to study it, because the total number of people involved may be in the millions and across all age ranges,” he says.

What’s actually causing the ED?
Figuring out the cause of erectile dysfunction would be challenging as there are so many potential causes.
No matter the cause, “[erectile dysfunction is] the final common pathway that no man wants to go to,” says William W. Li, MD, president and medical director of the Angiogenesis Foundation, a nonprofit that studies the health and disease of blood vessels.

For starters, the pandemic has introduced an immense amount of stress, says Alexandra Stockwell, a relationship and intimacy expert. “The desire for sex and intimacy is lower,” Stockwell says. “In order to have really great sex, you have to be able to relax. The pandemic just makes that exceedingly difficult for many people.”
That seemed true for Bruce (whose name has been changed to protect his privacy), a 66-year-old from Long Island, NY, who experienced erectile dysfunction after getting Covid-19 in late March. For him, the ED, which persisted for four to five weeks, was just the tip of his issues. “I just wanted to be alive,” he said. “The ED was no big deal.”

Based on what scientists know about SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, it’s possible that the virus could have direct effects on erectile dysfunction. Successfully getting and maintaining an erection not only depends on mood, but also testosterone, blood flow, and nerves. In the penis, nerves are critically dependent on a fishnet of blood vessels to get an erection. SARS-CoV-2 exploits the ACE2 receptor, which is found in both nerve cells and endothelial cells lining blood vessels. ACE2 is also found in the cells of the testicles, the organ in men that makes testosterone, a hormone that fuels a man’s sex drive. Li and his colleagues have found that the virus infects testicular cells during the acute phase of Covid-19, which means the virus may be impacting testosterone production.

On top of the effects in the penis, Covid-19 affects the cardiovascular and pulmonary systems, which, in turn, are critical for sexual function, says Li.
Wessells notes that underlying health conditions, such as diabetes, obesity, hypertension, inactivity, and smoking, may predispose men to developing ED, and that at least a few of those are associated with a higher risk of contracting Covid-19 as well. Once someone contracts Covid-19, that may be the “straw that broke the camel’s back for the ED,” Wessells says.

Fortunately, for men who suffer from erectile dysfunction, many treatments, such as Viagra, should help even if Covid-19 has damaged the vasculature, says Wessells.

Some men who say Covid-19 caused their erectile dysfunction have found some reprieve.

Art (whose name has also been changed to protect his privacy), a 53-year-old from Elmira, New York, waited until marriage to have sex with his wife. Both of them got Covid-19 in the spring. During their honeymoon this summer, the sex just… didn’t happen, because he couldn’t get an erection. “We knew we wanted children, but I’m having all sorts of issues,” he said. “There’s definitely a degree of guilt. I’m convinced I’m the problem.” Doctors dismissed his concerns that the erectile dysfunction may have been caused by Covid-19. He eventually got over the stigma of talking about his sexual health and opened up to his parents, who suggested he start taking Geritol, vitamins that help with sexual dysfunction. So far, Art says, they’ve helped. “I need to make the best of it when I have it.”

Even so, the emotional toll for some men persists.

“When I’m in the mood and physically reporting for duty, my anxiety has increased,” says Bell. And he’s still sometimes frustrated about the impact that Covid-19 has had on his sex life: the erectile dysfunction “crushed” his confidence during sex.
For now, he hopes that his story offers a cautionary tale. “Stay away from Covid to keep that willy up.”
 
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hal2kilo

Lifer
Feb 24, 2009
23,431
10,324
136
Yes, THAT one too :D
Perhaps, yet another reason to wear a mask?


Yes, Covid Penis Is a Thing
Some men say Covid-19 is hitting them below the belt

When Steven Bell caught Covid-19 this spring, he was surprised that he didn’t have a fever. Rather, it felt like a bad sinus infection. Soon, he lost his sense of smell, and went on to develop insomnia. He felt like the virus was also affecting his circulation, and would swing his arms in circles to keep the blood flowing. Then, more bafflingly, when he and his wife were intimate, he couldn’t get an erection. “It was frustrating and infuriating for me, because I knew it wasn’t working the way it should,” said Bell, a 49-year-old from Phoenix, AZ.

“My ego wouldn’t accept that I was performing like an 80-year-old in the bedroom.”

Some men who have survived Covid-19 say that the virus may have impacted their ability to get or maintain an erection. That tracks with the idea that Covid-19 is a vascular disease, which Elemental senior writer Dana Smith explained at length in May, as blood flow is important for getting or maintaining an erection. Erectile dysfunction can occur at any age — and becomes more common as men get older — and may affect up to a third of all men. In the context of Covid-19, men as young as 39 have been documented to experience erectile dysfunction as they recovered from the virus.

Currently, there are a handful of anecdotal reports, but no hard data nor large-scale study that documents the link, if any, between Covid-19 and erectile dysfunction. But for the men experiencing such issues, they’re convinced that the erectile dysfunction was caused by the novel coronavirus, because they never had issues with arousal or performance during sex prior to contracting the virus. Hunter Wessells, MD, a urologist at the University of Washington School of Medicine, urges other practitioners to collect this data on their patients. “It’s important to study it, because the total number of people involved may be in the millions and across all age ranges,” he says.

What’s actually causing the ED?
Figuring out the cause of erectile dysfunction would be challenging as there are so many potential causes.
No matter the cause, “[erectile dysfunction is] the final common pathway that no man wants to go to,” says William W. Li, MD, president and medical director of the Angiogenesis Foundation, a nonprofit that studies the health and disease of blood vessels.

For starters, the pandemic has introduced an immense amount of stress, says Alexandra Stockwell, a relationship and intimacy expert. “The desire for sex and intimacy is lower,” Stockwell says. “In order to have really great sex, you have to be able to relax. The pandemic just makes that exceedingly difficult for many people.”
That seemed true for Bruce (whose name has been changed to protect his privacy), a 66-year-old from Long Island, NY, who experienced erectile dysfunction after getting Covid-19 in late March. For him, the ED, which persisted for four to five weeks, was just the tip of his issues. “I just wanted to be alive,” he said. “The ED was no big deal.”

Based on what scientists know about SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, it’s possible that the virus could have direct effects on erectile dysfunction. Successfully getting and maintaining an erection not only depends on mood, but also testosterone, blood flow, and nerves. In the penis, nerves are critically dependent on a fishnet of blood vessels to get an erection. SARS-CoV-2 exploits the ACE2 receptor, which is found in both nerve cells and endothelial cells lining blood vessels. ACE2 is also found in the cells of the testicles, the organ in men that makes testosterone, a hormone that fuels a man’s sex drive. Li and his colleagues have found that the virus infects testicular cells during the acute phase of Covid-19, which means the virus may be impacting testosterone production.

On top of the effects in the penis, Covid-19 affects the cardiovascular and pulmonary systems, which, in turn, are critical for sexual function, says Li.
Wessells notes that underlying health conditions, such as diabetes, obesity, hypertension, inactivity, and smoking, may predispose men to developing ED, and that at least a few of those are associated with a higher risk of contracting Covid-19 as well. Once someone contracts Covid-19, that may be the “straw that broke the camel’s back for the ED,” Wessells says.

Fortunately, for men who suffer from erectile dysfunction, many treatments, such as Viagra, should help even if Covid-19 has damaged the vasculature, says Wessells.

Some men who say Covid-19 caused their erectile dysfunction have found some reprieve.

Art (whose name has also been changed to protect his privacy), a 53-year-old from Elmira, New York, waited until marriage to have sex with his wife. Both of them got Covid-19 in the spring. During their honeymoon this summer, the sex just… didn’t happen, because he couldn’t get an erection. “We knew we wanted children, but I’m having all sorts of issues,” he said. “There’s definitely a degree of guilt. I’m convinced I’m the problem.” Doctors dismissed his concerns that the erectile dysfunction may have been caused by Covid-19. He eventually got over the stigma of talking about his sexual health and opened up to his parents, who suggested he start taking Geritol, vitamins that help with sexual dysfunction. So far, Art says, they’ve helped. “I need to make the best of it when I have it.”

Even so, the emotional toll for some men persists.

“When I’m in the mood and physically reporting for duty, my anxiety has increased,” says Bell. And he’s still sometimes frustrated about the impact that Covid-19 has had on his sex life: the erectile dysfunction “crushed” his confidence during sex.
For now, he hopes that his story offers a cautionary tale. “Stay away from Covid to keep that willy up.”
Oh, no! All you people better start wearing masks now. It's now officially not a hoax. Where's my gun.
 

Viper1j

Diamond Member
Jul 31, 2018
4,169
3,645
136
So maybe I've had covid then. My penis has shrunk, I assumed it was because I was masturbating with Crisco (it's shortening) but maybe not...

And it still leaves open the possibility of contracting cotton balls, or worse...

Nobody wants to walk around with beer nuts. :cool:
 

hal2kilo

Lifer
Feb 24, 2009
23,431
10,324
136
Now I know there was a conspiracy by the government to kill stereo AM. It would have killed talk radio. See, I can have my own little bubble fantasies too. Sort of fun to make believe.
 

sdifox

No Lifer
Sep 30, 2005
95,009
15,128
126
So maybe I've had covid then. My penis has shrunk, I assumed it was because I was masturbating with Crisco (it's shortening) but maybe not...


Should have used real butter.

As to op, there are no organs that doesn't depend on bloodflow so I don't get your title.
 

MrSquished

Lifer
Jan 14, 2013
21,254
19,747
136
Probably cuts off blood supply to the brain too.

A large portion of mask-free MAGA are pretty much brain dead limp-dicked douchebags.

Nothing new here.
 
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Viper1j

Diamond Member
Jul 31, 2018
4,169
3,645
136
Should have used real butter.

As to op, there are no organs that doesn't depend on bloodflow so I don't get your title.

Blood flow in the lungs is usually considered to be a bad thing.
 

Meghan54

Lifer
Oct 18, 2009
11,528
5,045
136
Don't know about you, but I breathe oxygen.

Any liquid, whether it be blood, or water in the lungs is usually called drowning.


The pulmonary artery carries blood from the heart to the left and right lungs. There, the blood flow goes into smaller and smaller vessels until it flows into the capillaries of the aveolar sacs, where the O2/CO2 gas exchange occurs. Then the blood flows out of the lungs back to the heart via the pulmonary vein. Then the blood is circulated throughout the body and finally returns back to the heart to begin the cycle again. We be having lots of blood in our lungs all the time.

Interestingly, the pulmonary artery is the only artery to carry deoxygenated blood and the pulmonary vein is the only vein to carry fully oxygenated blood....just the opposite as compared to the rest of the vascular system.

The rule of blood flow in the body is veins carry blood to the heart, arteries carry blood away from the heart.
 
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Viper1j

Diamond Member
Jul 31, 2018
4,169
3,645
136
The pulmonary artery carries blood from the heart to the left and right lungs. There, the blood flow goes into smaller and smaller vessels until it flows into the capillaries of the aveolar sacs, where the O2/CO2 gas exchange occurs. Then the blood flows out of the lungs back to the heart via the pulmonary vein. Then the blood is circulated throughout the body and finally returns back to the heart to begin the cycle again. We be having lots of blood in our lungs all the time.

Interestingly, the pulmonary artery is the only artery to carry deoxygenated blood and the pulmonary vein is the only vein to carry fully oxygenated blood....just the opposite as compared to the rest of the vascular system.

The rule of blood flow in the body is veins carry blood to the heart, arteries carry blood away from the heart.

You're saying that no one has ever drowned from blood in their lungs?
 

Meghan54

Lifer
Oct 18, 2009
11,528
5,045
136
You're saying that no one has ever drowned from blood in their lungs?

Dunno...u got a cert. of death that lists blood in lungs as cause of death? If someone is leaking/pouring blood into their lungs, either they’ve had trauma to their chest or suffer from something like pulm. edema, which will be the actual causes of death.

So, sure you can drown a with blood in your lungs but it’s not typical. You’re dying from something else and the blood is only an overt sign of the underlying cause.

So, u drowning right now? Ur lungs are FULL of blood constantly.
 

Viper1j

Diamond Member
Jul 31, 2018
4,169
3,645
136
Dunno...u got a cert. of death that lists blood in lungs as cause of death? If someone is leaking/pouring blood into their lungs, either they’ve had trauma to their chest or suffer from something like pulm. edema, which will be the actual causes of death.

So, sure you can drown a with blood in your lungs but it’s not typical. You’re dying from something else and the blood is only an overt sign of the underlying cause.

So, u drowning right now? Ur lungs are FULL of blood constantly.

Now? Nah... Just remembered something I saw when I was a kid. Saw a friend punch a bully with a pair of scissors between his fingers. Stopped the asshole in his tracks, heard my parents talking about it later. They said his lungs filled up with blood and collapsed.