Is Male Organ Odor a Sign of a Medical Condition?
by John Dugan OwnerRank and persistent male organ odor is an
unfortunately common condition and often is due to improper attention to male organ care, particularly in the
area of hygiene. However, sometimes a persistent male organ odor, especially
one accompanied by urinary stench, may herald a medical condition which will
need to be attended to.
If a
man pays proper attention to his hygiene issues and still has a persistent male
organ odor problem, it pays to bring this to the attention of his doctor. The
doctor can then see if an underlying or co-existing medical condition may be
the problem.
Some
of the issues the doctor may investigate are:
- A
social disease. A
strong odor can sometimes be linked to a social disease, which will of course
need to be seen to immediately. Among the social diseases for which member odor
may be a “marker” are chlamydia and gonorrhea. Most of the time, male organ
odor by itself is not a symptom of a social disease; it is much more likely to
be found along with a discharge or with pain during urination. However, it is
better to be safe than sorry.
- Anaerobic
infection. Anaerobic
infections are fairly rare in the male organ, but they do occasionally occur
there. These infections are caused by a bacteria called an anaerobe, and it
really only thrives in areas in which little or no oxygen is present. Some of
the more popular conditions caused by anaerobes are gangrene, tetanus and
botulism. If an anaerobic infection occurs in the member, it is likely to
indicate that there is dead tissue in the organ, and that can be very serious
indeed. Again and fortunately, such infections rarely occur in the manhood.
- Dehydration. Sometimes male organ odor
results from a urinary condition, often from simple dehydration or lack of
sufficient water. Often urine-related manhood odor is due to consumption of
foods with a particularly strong odor. If the urine in which these foods are
passed has a high water concentration, it can dilute
the strong aroma more effectively. When a man has not consumed enough water,
there is less water in the urine to act as a diluter, and therefore a stronger
odor.
- Diabetes. When well managed,
diabetes tends not to produce its own bodily odor issue. But poorly managed
diabetes may result in excess glucose (sugar) intruding upon the urinary
system. The excess sugar thickens the urine and also produces a sugary odor
that sounds pleasant in theory but is actually quite off-putting in practice.
- A
bladder condition. As part of the urinary system, issues that arise in the
bladder can affect the urine content which can in turn produce male organ odor.
An infection is the most common bladder issue of this sort, but sometimes a
condition called a fistula may arise. This means that the bladder and the
intestines develop an improper connection which produces a bacterial overflow.
Fistulas often require surgery.
Because
male organ odor can be a deal-breaker with many partners, men want to seek
prompt attention for any medical condition that may be responsible for the
issue. In addition, they should make it part of their daily health regimen to
apply a first rate male organ health crème (health professionals
recommend Man1 Man Oil, which is clinically proven mild and safe for skin).
Not just any crème will do; first, be sure that the crème’s ingredients list
includes vitamin A. Also called retinol, vitamin A has wonderful antibacterial
properties that can attack some of the bacteria most often responsible for a
strong member odor. It also pays to find a crème that contains alpha lipoic
acid. As a potent antioxidant, alpha lipoic acid battles free radicals that can
cause oxidative stress. By keeping free radicals away, manhood skin is stronger
and more likely to resist odor-causing conditions.
Sponsor Ads
Created on Sep 5th 2017 22:31. Viewed 385 times.