You should be able to go home shortly after the surgery. Your doctor will likely recommend you have someone drive you home so you don't put any unnecessary strain or pressure on the surgical site. You should be able to urinate without any trouble, but it might feel uncomfortable.
These may include: Pain or burning when you urinate. A frequent need to urinate without being able to pass much urine.
You'll need to rest for 24 hours after surgery. You can probably do light activity after two or three days, but you'll need to avoid sports, lifting and heavy work for a week or so. Overdoing it could cause pain or bleeding inside the scrotum. Avoid any sexual activity for a week or so.
THE FIRST DAYS OF RECOVERY: KICK BACK AND RELAX
The first few days after a vasectomy are all about rest. Even if you feel good, don't do anything even remotely close to strenuous activity. You should spend most of the first 48 hours post-surgery sitting down, icing your scrotum with your feet elevated.
You may take a shower the day after your vasectomy surgery, but avoid sitting in water (no bathtubs, hot tubs, etc.) and avoid submerging yourself under water (no swimming, snorkeling, scuba diving, etc.) for one week after your vasectomy.
The day after a vasectomy men can get up, walk around, remove the dressing and take a shower. Dr. Malone advises that patients that they avoid heavy lifting and lengthy walks on the first day of their recovery. Men can expect to return to work within 24 to 48 hours of their procedure.
Alcohol can increase the likelihood of complications, and is best avoided for 48 hours before and after vasectomy.
Vasectomy is a highly successful outpatient procedure with few complications and a quick recovery time. The exact time it takes to fully recover may differ from person to person, but you'll most likely be able to resume your normal daily activities after one to two weeks, at most.
As with any period of recovery, rest is crucial. For the first few days after your procedure, you should be resting as much as possible. Try lying down with your feet raised—this will help increase circulation and promote healing.
Let your partner lay down as much as possible for two to three days after the procedure. Help with tasks that involve heavy lifting or strenuous movement for about a week after the procedure. Provide your partner with lots of ice or bags of frozen peas to ease the post-surgery pain. Encourage your partner take it easy.
How long will it take after my vasectomy before I can assume that I am sterile? A. It usually takes about 15-20 ejaculations after the operation before you flush out any remaining sperm from each vas deferens. You should use an alternative method of contraception during this time.
Avoid long periods of standing and walking. Wear supportive briefs/swimming trunks day and night, for the first 5-6 days. Do not return to boxer shorts for at least a month.
You can take a shower the evening after your vasectomy. Avoid bathing, hot tubs, swimming pools for a week until the small opening in the scrotum created during surgery is sealed. This will help prevent infection to the operative area while the small hole made for your no-scalpel procedure heals over.
The average person getting a vasectomy was also found to have one to three children. Research in the American Journal of Men's Health found that the average age for a vasectomy was about 35, with the typical age range for the procedure between the ages of 30 and 56.
Do not drive for at least two hours after surgery. Sudden lightheadedness or fainting could impair your driving ability and endanger yourself and others. Rest, and avoid getting up unnecessarily.
In general, you should wait until you don't feel any pain or swelling around the surgery site before having sex. This may mean waiting a week or more after your procedure. Having sex immediately after the surgery could reopen the incisions and allow bacteria to enter the wound. This could potentially lead to infection.
Keep in mind that vasectomies don't offer immediate protection against pregnancy. Sperm are stored in the vas deferens and will remain there for a few weeks or months after the procedure. This is why doctors recommend that people use an alternative method of contraception for at least three months after the procedure.
Men who have a vasectomy still ejaculate the same way in the same amounts – the only difference is that there is no sperm in the semen. The size, shape of look of the penis, testicles and scrotum is unchanged.
There is no specific frequency with which a man should ejaculate. There is no solid evidence that failure to ejaculate causes health problems. However, ejaculating frequently can reduce the man's risk of getting prostate cancer. Ejacu-lation can be through having sex or masturbating a few times a day.
Most men who have a vasectomy will a high level of satisfaction with their procedure and have no change in their sexual desire. Some men report increased sexual satisfaction because the fear of causing an unintended pregnancy during sexual intercourse has been greatly reduced.
How long should I wait before running? Again, you really should listen to your surgeon, but we typically tell our patients to give it a good seven days as a minimum before they return to any vigorous physical activity. This reduces the chance of irritating the scrotum and aggravating any swelling down there.
You produce sperm every day, but a full sperm regeneration cycle (spermatogenesis) takes about 64 days. Spermatogenesis is the complete cycle of sperm production and maturation. It constantly supplies your body with sperm able to travel through the vagina to an unfertilized ovum in a woman's ovaries to conceive.
Can my partner tell if I have had a vasectomy? Sperm adds very little to the semen volume, so you shouldn't notice any change in your ejaculate after vasectomy. Your partner may sometimes be able to feel the vasectomy site. This is particularly true if you have developed a granuloma.
Family planning experts say one of the major hurdles to promoting vasectomies is men's fear of emasculation. "There's a great deal of fear about having any kind of operation performed on the scrotum," Schlegel said. "It's a common misconception that vasectomy involves castration.