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CDC Warning About Eating Ass


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19 hours ago, BBSMKR said:

Almost everything we do has a risk and I’m sure like most folk we mitigate where possible, like PrEP and cleaning ourselves as thoroughly as possible. I love eating ass, but I can quickly tell within seconds if it’s a stop now or carry on situation!  Same with ass to mouth, I’m more than happy to put it in mouth after being in my ass, other scenarios I’m more cautious.

other scenarios I’m more cautious.

Let me guess, put a cock in your mouth after being in a female pussy? 😛🤣

 

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19 hours ago, ErosWired said:

The thing about ass is that there is in fact no such thing as a ‘clean ass’. By a ‘clean ass’ we mean that there is no trace of fecal matter present, but the colon is an internal organ from start to finish, and there is no place in it that isn’t teeming with bacteria. Most of the bacteria are beneficial or benign, but some are not. There’s also mucus that makes things move along, and that ‘natural lubrication’ so many bottoms claim to produce is just that. Bacteria thrive in it.

Just because a bottom has rinsed out thoroughly does not mean all the bacteria have been rinsed out, and you wouldn’t want them out, as they’re needed for the function of the organ.

So don’t kid yourself that you can be careful or that you can sense when it’s safe to proceed. The inside of the ass isn’t ‘clean’ and can’t be made ‘clean’.

I have to agree 100% to that.

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The developing resistance of Shigella to antibiotics is nothing new.  We used to treat it empirically.   Now we direct care based on sensitivity when we send a sample off.    This is one of those diseases where you don't treat the diahrea with Lopreinide or Lomotil.   Stopping diarrhea can make things worse.   Shigella isn't the only thing you can get from fecal contamination.  Like everything, the individual needs to evaluate the risks.   Young, old, and immunocompromised all have a higher chance of having problems.

 

From the National Library of Medicine

The antibiotic regimen used for the treatment can be divided into two groups based on age. Antibiotic susceptibility testing is highly recommended as resistance to the drugs is common and may vary regionally.

 

(Superintendent of Military Public Health)

 

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  • 2 weeks later...
On 2/28/2023 at 5:28 AM, AirmaxAndy said:

Not just rimming... sucking a cock that's been in someone's hole is also just as risky. 

This is a good reason to stop wasting time on oral and get back to swapping loads anally 😉

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On 2/28/2023 at 3:46 PM, Oldercumslut said:

The developing resistance of Shigella to antibiotics is nothing new.  We used to treat it empirically.   Now we direct care based on sensitivity when we send a sample off.    This is one of those diseases where you don't treat the diahrea with Lopreinide or Lomotil.   Stopping diarrhea can make things worse.   Shigella isn't the only thing you can get from fecal contamination.  Like everything, the individual needs to evaluate the risks.   Young, old, and immunocompromised all have a higher chance of having problems.

 

From the National Library of Medicine

The antibiotic regimen used for the treatment can be divided into two groups based on age. Antibiotic susceptibility testing is highly recommended as resistance to the drugs is common and may vary regionally.

 

(Superintendent of Military Public Health)

 

What about treating it prophylactically  (or after the fact) with massive amounts of garlic (so a partial naturopathic approach) ?  Of course serious illness cannot be overcome necessarily using  just naturopathic medicine but very large doses of garlic have often proven invaluable for me when confronted with diarrhea. 

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10 hours ago, fuckholedc said:

What about treating it prophylactically  (or after the fact) with massive amounts of garlic (so a partial naturopathic approach) ?  Of course serious illness cannot be overcome necessarily using  just naturopathic medicine but very large doses of garlic have often proven invaluable for me when confronted with diarrhea. 

This has actually been the subject of several studies, and there does appear to be some efficacy of aqueous extract of garlic as an anti-shigellosis treatment. A Google search on ‘garlic treatment for shigellosis’ will turn up several research abstracts for those interested.

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Also, for those of us who do choose to engage in activities that have a risk of gastrointestinal contamination, I think fact that we all have a microbiome in there is good to remember. If you ingest Shigella (or any other pathogen), it isn't going in there by itself. It's being added to a complex ecosystem of microbes that is in a stable equilibrium and has many benefits for its host. If your existing microbiome is robust and well-balanced, a small number of extraneous organisms find it more challenging to disrupt that equilibrium and gain a foothold for themselves. So take good care of your gut, and it will take good care of you.

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3 hours ago, viking8x6 said:

So take good care of your gut, and it will take good care of you.

Heh.

It’s not the way I treat my colon that concerns me. The way other men treat my colon almost certainly doesn’t qualify as ‘taking good care’. …At least, not in the sense you mean.

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7 hours ago, ErosWired said:

It’s not the way I treat my colon that concerns me. The way other men treat my colon almost certainly doesn’t qualify as ‘taking good care’. …At least, not in the sense you mean.

Ah, well... I suppose you'll have to settle for caring for your uvula 😉

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I had resistant shigella a few years back and it was the worst thing I’ve ever had to endure. 105° fever and no antibiotics were working. I almost died, and was rushed into the ER without wait. My immune system literally had no help. They tried several IV pouches of antibiotics and none of them worked. The antibiotic resistance testing in Petri dishes had little activity on the shigella strain. I was admitted for two days. The second time I had it, fighting it off was a little better. Miraculously I still had some T cells floating around with a memory of it. 

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On 3/9/2023 at 11:09 AM, viking8x6 said:

If your existing microbiome is robust and well-balanced, a small number of extraneous organisms find it more challenging to disrupt that equilibrium and gain a foothold for themselves. So take good care of your gut, and it will take good care of you.

To add: the converse of this is that if something like shigella (or any number of other pathogens) takes root in your gut, the antibiotics needed to treat it are not usually that discriminating - that is, they don't target shigella and only shigella. A lot of "good" bacteria in your biome can be wiped out (or at least sharply reduced) by antibiotics powerful enough to treat this kind of thing. They'll often recover, over time, but your system can be out of whack for a long period.

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