I have a 53 Year old male friend who gets lots of lap dances and has developed a small lump inside his penis. Does lap dances cause this or could it be comthing non related?



I have a 53 Year old male friend who gets lots of lap dances and has developed a small lump inside his penis. Does lap dances cause this or could it be comthing non related?



That was something non related.





Your friend should visit a doctor. I dont think it could be caused by lap dances. Im assuming u are referring to grinding and it possibly being caused by rough grinding? I dont think it would cause a lump tho, possibly an abrasion.
There are many stereotypes about the industry that I work in. Sometimes they can be true but human beings are very diverse creatures and cannot be pigeon-holed into one category.
Some of the most effortlessly beautiful, kind, intelligent, successful, motivated, driven and ridiculously hilarious women that I have ever met have been dancers. I've met the best friends that I've ever had in this industry.



Yes grinding. Of course at that age men need to get checked annually for prostrate problems. I think he is afraid of what it could be.





If it was something like cancer it would be better to find that out sooner than later even tho it is very scary. Time is of the essence.
There are many stereotypes about the industry that I work in. Sometimes they can be true but human beings are very diverse creatures and cannot be pigeon-holed into one category.
Some of the most effortlessly beautiful, kind, intelligent, successful, motivated, driven and ridiculously hilarious women that I have ever met have been dancers. I've met the best friends that I've ever had in this industry.



Thank You! You are right. I'm not a doctor so I don't know if a lump would be a tumor or something non harmful that might go away? Any ideas?





There is no way medically speaking that grinding could do that.
Look like a woman
Think like a man
Act like a lady
Work like a dog
- My Great Grandmother Bessie's Recipe for Success





There are many stereotypes about the industry that I work in. Sometimes they can be true but human beings are very diverse creatures and cannot be pigeon-holed into one category.
Some of the most effortlessly beautiful, kind, intelligent, successful, motivated, driven and ridiculously hilarious women that I have ever met have been dancers. I've met the best friends that I've ever had in this industry.



It's not big and is in the middle of the pole. He said that isn't painful although he can feel a minor discomfort when he touches it although he says it isn't painful to any extent.





I did a search and it did come up with Peyronie's disease.
http://www.betterhealth.vic.gov.au/BHCV2/bhcarticles.nsf/pages/Peyronie's_disease?open
Peyronie's disease
Peyronie’s disease causes abnormal, fibrous lumps (plaques) to form inside the erectile tissue of the penis. Over time, these plaques can grow and deform the erect penis and cause it to curve.
Peyronie’s disease usually affects the upper side of the penis, but the disease may sometimes target the lower side or both sides. Infection or injury to the penis can lead to Peyronie’s disease, but the cause remains unknown in the majority of cases.
The condition is more common in middle aged and older men. Peyronie’s disease affects around three per cent of men aged 30–80 years. There is no cure and the condition is difficult to treat. The most successful form of treatment is surgery to remove the plaques and replace the erectile tissue with an inflatable prosthesis (to create an artificial erection).
Symptoms
Peyronie’s disease can be mild, moderate or severe. It may appear suddenly or progress slowly over a matter of weeks or months. The progression of symptoms may include:
A small, localised ache or discomfort is felt in the penis.
A lump forms at the site of the ache.
The lump may be painless.
The plaque contracts as it spreads, bending or kinking the erect penis towards the affected side.
Erections become uncomfortable or painful.
The erections are softer than usual.
There may be one or several plaques.
It does say trauma to the penis can cause it but this would be in the form of bending the erect penis severely enough to rupture the membrane that covers the blood vessels.
There are many stereotypes about the industry that I work in. Sometimes they can be true but human beings are very diverse creatures and cannot be pigeon-holed into one category.
Some of the most effortlessly beautiful, kind, intelligent, successful, motivated, driven and ridiculously hilarious women that I have ever met have been dancers. I've met the best friends that I've ever had in this industry.





Sorry I cant get the edit function to work so I had to post again. It could also be a cyst.
There are many stereotypes about the industry that I work in. Sometimes they can be true but human beings are very diverse creatures and cannot be pigeon-holed into one category.
Some of the most effortlessly beautiful, kind, intelligent, successful, motivated, driven and ridiculously hilarious women that I have ever met have been dancers. I've met the best friends that I've ever had in this industry.



Thank You so much! Many of those symptoms he is experiencing although he says he is still able to make love to his wife.





U r welcome!!![]()
There are many stereotypes about the industry that I work in. Sometimes they can be true but human beings are very diverse creatures and cannot be pigeon-holed into one category.
Some of the most effortlessly beautiful, kind, intelligent, successful, motivated, driven and ridiculously hilarious women that I have ever met have been dancers. I've met the best friends that I've ever had in this industry.
Hey, I am a thirteen year prostate cancer survivor, and I can tell you that the lump is NOT prostate cancer. The prostate is up inside the body, not in the penis. A doctor can fel the lower part of the prostate when giving a digital exam. At age 53, your friend should be having his doctor do blood tests and digital exams once per year. I was fifty when I developed prostate cancer. 36 to 48 percent of prostate cancer victims die, and when they die, they die in agony that morphine can't even touch.
A lump on the testicles could indicate testicular cancer. A friend developed testicular cancer at the age of eighteen and had one testicle surgically removed. He and his doctor thought that it might have been caused by the trauma of being kicked in the crotch during karate sparring. He always wore protective equipment (a cup), but there is still some shock transmitted when one is kicked directly and forcefully in the crotch. Today he is alive and well in his thirties and has two children he fathered after the surgery.
A lump ON the penis is a new one to me, and I am not saying that it is not the disease described above. But a search that an intelligent person does on the Internet does NOT mean that your friend should rest at ease and not see a doctor. ANY abnormality or change in the body should be taken at once to a doctor for analysis and diagnosis. It could be serious, and waiting could make it incurable.
If I had not acted on the blood test that indicated a possibility of prostate cancer, I would not be here today typing this. And I would have had a most unpleasant and expensive death. I can't say that I like what happened to my body after the surgery, but it beats dying in agony. And dead men don't have sex, either.
Tell your friend to get to his doctor immediately.
Last edited by UtahMike; 07-15-2008 at 11:40 AM.




Could be a sebaceous cyst.
"Don't piss off a motivated stripper."
Oh, and that doctor should be a urologist.
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