• A huge cyst like a DOORKNOB: Hard boiled eggs, anyone?
    34 replies, posted
[hd]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z0l8KGT3GmU[/hd] That is a yuuuuge cyst, holy shit
How the fuck do you just let a cyst get that big. It doesn't show up over night
what's with all the disgusting body-nastiness threads
That thumbnail... that looks like whipped cream...
I don't know why but I enjoy watching this woman and her videos. Must be a relief to feel all of that shit coming out of you.
Why do I find this stuff fascinating?
[QUOTE=nerdster409;51234732]Why do I find this stuff fascinating?[/QUOTE] Because it is! :v: Her youtube channel is a goldmine [hd]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sWhL19P8akY[/hd] Looks practically like a piece of chicken breast in her neck! [editline]20th October 2016[/editline] Btw I didn't know there's a crowd who's into these cyst and lipoma popping videos like me, on FP. Maybe we could even get a general thread going?
I wonder how that tastes like.
[QUOTE=brenz;51234805]I wonder how that tastes like.[/QUOTE] Well that lipoma is made out of fat cells, so... maybe deep-fry it and try it? :v:
[QUOTE=Toy_Soldier;51234598]How the fuck do you just let a cyst get that big. It doesn't show up over night[/QUOTE] Some people assume that the body will drain it when the infection is over. But cysts rarely drain on their own. I had a nail infection that left a massive cyst on my thumb and I was waiting to see if it'd drain and ended up lancing it and draining a massive amount of goo.
I dunno about you but seeing these type of extracts is just kinda amazing in its own way, I mean look at the size of this thing when it comes out, like holy shit. [media]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=liyCJ0xtn-U[/media]
[QUOTE=Pretiacruento;51234746]Btw I didn't know there's a crowd who's into these cyst and lipoma popping videos like me, on FP. Maybe we could even get a general thread going?[/QUOTE] I think most people are here because, like me, were wondering why the fuck someone would post these gross as fuck videos, considering these have been popping up in the video section for a week or two so far.
[QUOTE=Reagy;51234974]I dunno about you but seeing these type of extracts is just kinda amazing in its own way, I mean look at the size of this thing when it comes out, like holy shit. [media]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=liyCJ0xtn-U[/media][/QUOTE] good lord. i wonder how much of the DNA in that thing is hers :v:
It feels like the video in the OP has a lot of seemingly healthy-looking flesh getting cut off. Is that par for the course when sealing up the excess skin from a cyst? It seems like it's going to create a nasty scar.
[QUOTE=Jamsponge;51235482]It feels like the video in the OP has a lot of seemingly healthy-looking flesh getting cut off. Is that par for the course when sealing up the excess skin from a cyst? It seems like it's going to create a nasty scar.[/QUOTE] The cut is nice and clean though, so it'll heal pretty good. Any cut in skin is going to leave a scar though. I've got a scar on my leg from falling out of a tree and clipping a broken branch. The wound was 0.5-1 centimeters wide, the scar is less than 0,5 cm wide after the wound healed. I can still feel where the scar tissue is on my leg so it's not that hard to find, but visually it's almost invisible. So I can imagine that whenever you get an incision with a scalpel it'll barely leave a scar.
Anyone want some cottage cheese? :sick:
Hmm, I feel like I'll have some ricotta cheese stuffed shells tonight.
[QUOTE=Toy_Soldier;51234598]How the fuck do you just let a cyst get that big. It doesn't show up over night[/QUOTE] People are terrified of doctors sometimes for somewhat legitimate reasons based on previous encounters. Not to mention that mental illness and other personality disorders often plays a substantial role. "Maybe it will just go away." "I don't want to waste someone's time/be a burden." "I don't deserve help." "I'm too embarrassed." Someone who is seriously depressed will very often not behave entirely rationally, and that's just scratching the surface of the crazy pile. It sucks, but the trap is self perpetuating. Once you avoid treatment, you often end up worse, and more inclined to avoid it.
Adding to the facts of what everyone previously said about why he didn't get this popped sooner, that this guy seems to be from some South or Central American country so it's much easier to conceive if this guy wasn't properly educated on cysts.
[QUOTE=TornadoAP;51237182]Adding to the facts of what everyone previously said about why he didn't get this popped sooner, that this guy seems to be from some South or Central American country so it's much easier to conceive if this guy wasn't properly educated on cysts.[/QUOTE] From what I understand, it's a cultural thing for middle aged Latinos to refrain for doctor visits. Poor education and healthcare access are also huge barriers to treatment.
Glad he got medical acystance for that disgusting thing.
[QUOTE=Tetsmega;51238498]From what I understand, it's a cultural thing for middle aged Latinos to refrain for doctor visits. Poor education and healthcare access are also huge barriers to treatment.[/QUOTE] Middle aged men tend to visit the doctor as little as possible over here too. Something about it fixing itself later
I've actually seen waay worse than this in real life. I'm doing a nursing bachelors right now and working as a nurse assistant at the side, and I've assisted on cleaning a sleeping sore (or pressure ulcer) at stage four [thumb]https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/12/Schema_stades_escarres.svg/300px-Schema_stades_escarres.svg.png[/thumb] That gray area is bone, it was a wild ride
[hd]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iMW6fPrYEXo[/hd] Oh lawd
jesus christ that requires an extremely strong stomach, i feel dizzy just from looking at it
[QUOTE=Zephyrs;51236837]People are terrified of doctors sometimes for somewhat legitimate reasons based on previous encounters. Not to mention that mental illness and other personality disorders often plays a substantial role. "Maybe it will just go away." "I don't want to waste someone's time/be a burden." "I don't deserve help." "I'm too embarrassed." edit : im idiot for explaining private shit. You're right people like me exist.
[QUOTE=xeo xeo;51238901]I've actually seen waay worse than this in real life. I'm doing a nursing bachelors right now and working as a nurse assistant at the side, and I've assisted on cleaning a sleeping sore (or pressure ulcer) at stage four That gray area is bone, it was a wild ride[/QUOTE] Christ, just looked up how bad that gets, how that can be allowed to hit stage 3 and go past is crazy, surely they'd notice even with bed bound people. The example image also showed what happens past stage 4, only solution it gives is literally amputation of the area.
[QUOTE=Reagy;51243681]Christ, just looked up how bad that gets, how that can be allowed to hit stage 3 and go past is crazy, surely they'd notice even with bed bound people. The example image also showed what happens past stage 4, only solution it gives is literally amputation of the area.[/QUOTE] To preface this post, I'm just gonna say for the record, just so you all know and for my own conscience that I'm not breaking my nurse/patient oath of silence, since I'm not giving any personal information about the patient what so ever. Well here's the thing, of course bed sores are noticed, but there's really just a finite amount of things you can do about them. In the case of the patient I was tending both legs were previously amputated and the sore was the butt. Because of the legs the patient couldn't really sleep on the stomach, and being confined to sitting in a wheelchair all day wasn't really helping either. All we could do was thoroughly tend to the sore, ie. rinse with saltwater and change bandage every day. It was surreal to tend to, because the opening of the sore itself was maybe one and a half to two inches across, [I]but the inside pocket was four-ish inches across.[/I] It was extremely interesting to be a part of the process and see the folds drawn back and washed. I was assisting a nurse just a bit older than me, As I was holding the fold open I was giving her a look like "holy shit this wound is un-fucking real :ohno:" and she was eyeing me like "Yuop, don't gag now ;D" As to actually healing a sleeping sore: This particular one came and went randomly. Suddenly it would spontaneously heal up a great deal over a couple of weeks then open up and widen again. Nursing is awesome. If you guys ever have the chance of doing like a summer job at a hospital or nursing home I really recommend it.
[QUOTE=xeo xeo;51243793]As I was holding the fold open I was giving her a look like "holy shit this wound is un-fucking real :ohno:" and she was eyeing me like "Yuop, don't gag now ;D"[/quote] it's a thing i've definitely noticed before, the ability of doctors and nurses to look at a wound and talk about it like it's just a fun thing to see, like a frog happily leaping in the air, something on that level i don't understand because i'm fucking squeamish about bodily harm, i see anything wrong about my body and i'm worried sick all i know is i have pretty mad respect for people who treat wounds like it's nothing
Well thanks for the respect I guess :pudge: I've never been particularly squeamish, and since I started working as a nurse (primarily for patients at 80+) I've realized that I can be pretty stone cold about that kind of stuff. I've wiped and washed a plethora of bodily fluids, [sp]caught puke in my hands and washed a prolapsed anus the size of a tennis ball[/sp] (spoilering bc gross) but the thing is: When you're in the situation you're really in a very different mindset than you are day-to-day. You're not just doing gross stuff, you're doing your actual job, (a very important job too) and just deciding to be professional does wonders to your tolerance to gore and nastyness. Hell, just wearing scrubs (the clothes doctors and nurses wears) helps to distance yourself from the fact that you're two knuckles deep into the rectum of a 90 year old woman digging out turds
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