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agapoulo

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Everything posted by agapoulo

  1. https://twitter.com/AstroPeggy/status/882222501220110337/video/1 am I dreaming? Look at the lady...
  2. Seni Quattro is very good. Cover with a Gary Active PUL pant to help prevent leaks. Very comfortable, wicks well. No leaks even while belly sleeping. Also like Tranquility ATN with a booster (baby diaper with holes poked in back, NSC or XP Medical). I find the Confidry is too bulky for comfort, and doesn`t wick very fast.
  3. Tamsulosin actually is now OTC in several countries such as England. It has less severe side-effects than prazosin. What is funny is that doxazosin, which is just as effective for BPH, but is available as a much cheaper generic medication, isn't. Alpha-1 blockers such as tamsulosin relax smooth muscles such as the bladder neck and internal urinary sphincter. They are useful for some types of urinary retention, but in a normal healthy person won't have much of a noticeable effect on urination.
  4. It's probably too late to help Abi, but for anyone else worried about the same risks the techniques and procedures to mitigate them are actually fairly within reach of people who are not IT specialists. The EFF has built a very informative and clear guide here: https://ssd.eff.org/en/module/keeping-your-data-safe For non-criminal actions such as simply accessing sites that could be questionable where you live, booting Tails from USB and using reasonable discipline will more than be enough. It will prevent any forensic "fishing expedition" from revealing anything since there won't be anything incriminating stored on the computer in the first place, nor ISP logs.
  5. Seni USA distributes via XP Medical and 3 other online stores. One of them, Wholesale Point also sells my favourite, the Seni Quattro. I am surprised at the large difference of price between XP and Wholesale Point (USD$104 at WP for 2 cases, USD$130 at XP, both with free shipping within USA). Anyone has used them? If yes, what has been your experience? I had never heard of them... Since XP was sold I have seen a decline in service, but now with such a large price difference I'm tempted to try WP.
  6. Lower urinary tract infection or some types of vesical irritation (maybe induced via your cath play) might be the culprit here. If it doesn't abate you might want to get checked out by a physician.
  7. Anyone else has pinhole leaks? Just got a new case and the first ones are pretty bad. I remember having this issue with the original Dry 24/7 before they stopped production and then came back with ConfiDry.
  8. Has anyone tried a shorter stent deliberately placed to only counteract the external sphincter and not also the internal one as with CathDiap's design? This would likely result in un-inhibitable reflex voids and stress incontinence, without the constant dripping.
  9. Hi Totophe, interesting approach. I will try it over the Christmas break and see what happens. Any chance you could upload your script`s TTS output in mp3 format? Thanks, A
  10. First welcome to DD! There is a wealth of knowledge in the threads already existing in the forums, so it's a good idea to first do some research. This is a recurring question, many of us have had it and some still do. Personally I spent hundreds of hours over the years researching it, digging in medical databases, urology, physiology and pharmacology textbooks, plus quite a bit of live experimentation in my younger (and much less wise) days. In short, there is no magic pill yet. Medications that have a good chance of inducing enuresis are simply too dangerous for recreational use. They are mostly powerful psychiatric and neurological medicines with very nasty potential side-effects such as irreversible liver damage, lethal cardiac arrythmias and other fun stuff. What works so far for some people with a bit less risk (these are NOT recommendations in any way, simply a summary of what is known) nitrous oxide (only with the party balloon technique, never a mask). Do your homework as it may be illegal in some jurisdictions. Obviously it doesn't count for a sleep wetting technique. alcohol, with proper prehydration. But it's possibly a slippery step towards alcoholism, and even infrequent binge drinking has bad health effects so this is in no way a recommendation. short acting benzodiazepines or analogues such as etizolam. Again do your homework, since some people have suffocated taking these drugs. Never mix with alcohol or any other depressant. GHB. Same thing, since some people have died using it and the therapeutic index is low (difference between an effective dose and one that will hurt you stents and catheters, well documented in other threads in this forum As far as we know, the ONLY technique that is somewhat reliable and without negative health effects is un-training, as well documented by several posters here. Wear a reliable diaper, have bed protection, set an alarm in the middle of the night, wet, and within a few weeks or months you may be wetting in your sleep.
  11. The medications we are talking about here can contribute to bedwetting in various ways. For instance, lithium carbonate is used for manic-depressive disorders, and has diuretic effects that can contribute to bedwetting -- moreso when coupled with other sedative medications. Antipsychotics can induce both enuresis/incontinence and urinary retention depending on specific chemical class, dosage, other medications taken, and so on. There are many studies about that and only theories as to the exact mechanisms. The apparently simple act of peeing is actually very complex, requires multiple systems to act in a coordinated fashion. The medications themselves have powerful and varied effects on multiple systems. In short, it's pretty complicated. I suggest you start with this http://bjp.rcpsych.org/content/200/1/7.long
  12. ZzzQuil and similar products contain diphenhydramine, which has strong anticholinergic effects, one of which is urinary retention. This is a subject that periodically comes up here, so some research will give you relevant posts. In short, there is no "magic pill" that will make you wet the bet with any reasonable level of safety. Many psychiatric and neurological medications can cause bedwetting as a side-effect, but they are too dangerous to take specifically to that end.
  13. Spray glue contains organic contaminants that
  14. The NSC Supreme is made in France, and is quite different from the ID-Slip, which is made in Belgium according to a label on package. About Seni Quattro, they are great, best "cloth" disposable I know. They are much more comfortable that NSC, and more than enough for night use (for me anyways). The NSC is too bulky where it doesn't need to be, whereas the Seni is "just right", very soft, and also higher in front which is good for belly sleepers.
  15. They look very similar to the Italian Seni brand, repackaged by Arplast Poly and Packaging company located in Brooklyn NY,
  16. Love them. They're the most comfortable non-plastic backed disposable I have tried. Quite absorbent yet discreet (much more than NSC Supreme or Abena 4 that are equivalent in absorbency), and they wick very well. For night use just put a tight stretchy brief over them and they don't move. Even better, use a PUL pant like Gary Active, and the holding brief last. They have good padding on the front sides, so great for belly sleepers or wetting sitting in cars, planes..
  17. Lots of medications can cause enuresis, but for most it is an infrequent side effect. Most commonly induced by risperidone, clozapine/olanzapine, and other atypical antipsychotics (up to 40% incidence according to some studies). Same for sodium oxybate (the legal version of GHB). Benzos occasionally, depends on dose, hydration level and individual susceptibility. I must add that the above medications can kill you and recreational use is foolish.
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