Man snaps his penis in THREE places after hearing sudden ‘snap’ during sex

Man snaps his penis in THREE places after suddenly hearing ‘pop’ when his member ‘slipped’ during sex

  • EXCLUSIVE: The man, from Tanzania, went to the hospital with a swollen, painful penis
  • Scans revealed that the man had broken three different parts of his penis

A man broke his penis in three places after it snapped against his partner during sex.

The 36-year-old, from Tanzania, showed up at the hospital a few hours after his blinding injury with a painful, swollen and bloody member.

He heard a loud “snap” after his penis hit his partner’s perineum – the skin between the vagina and anus – with a “very high” impact.

Scans showed the unnamed man, whose horrific injury was shared in a medical journal, had broken three different parts of his penis.

Medics operated on him to resolve the “extremely rare urological emergency” and he made a full recovery.

The unknown man, from Tanzania, appeared at the hospital with a painful, swollen and bloodied penis

HOW IS A PENIS BREACH MISSING?

A penile fracture occurs when the appendage is subject to sharp trauma with blunt force, which can occur during vigorous intercourse or masturbation.

Since 1924, 1,600 cases have been recorded worldwide — about 16 cases per year, the Telegraph reported in 2017.

Researchers noted that a gruesome cracking sound can be heard in 50 percent of cases. Four out of five male victims lost their erection.

Those already traumatized by breaking their penis are often left with erectile dysfunction and a lifetime of painful sex.

A 2017 report revealed a man from southern China was left in agony after breaking his penis during sex with his wife.

Doctors discovered that his penis was at an odd angle and had a swollen shape that made it look like an eggplant.

He was diagnosed with a penile fracture after tearing a spongy erectile tissue called corpora cavernosa.

Blood flows into corpora cavernosa which runs along the penis and makes it hard during an erection.

According to sex expert Tracey Cox, the trick to stopping penile injuries is to thrust fairly superficially.

Holding your partner close to you with a grinding rather than pushing motion also reduces the risk, she told MailOnline.

Detailing the story in the Case Reports from the International Journal of Surgerydoctors said that the patient went to the hospital with a swollen penis.

He complained that it was painful and that he had spent five hours bleeding from his urethra – the tube that expels urine and semen from the body.

His penis “slipped, lost its way, and hit the female perineal area while trying to reinsert it,” the medics wrote.

He quickly lost his erection and was in pain.

The patient went to a nearby health center, where he was given pain medication and referred to Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Center.

Urologists at the hospital, led by Dr Bartholomeo Nicholaus Ngowi, said his penis was ‘a bit twisted’, bloated and covered in blood. But the rest of his genitals seemed normal.

The anatomy of an erection is based on two spongy tubes that fill with blood and harden, called the corpora carvenosa, and a firm, fibrous sheath that surrounds them, the tunica albuginea.

An ultrasound revealed that he had broken a blood vessel in the corpora cavernosa.

And an MRI showed a tear from left to right through the tunica albuginea, corpora carvenosa and corpus spongiosum, which is erectile tissue. The scan also showed that there was a partial tear in the urethra and swelling.

Although there are no bones in the penis, these injuries are still known as a penile fracture.

The patient was rushed to emergency surgery, where a urologist repaired the fracture by “degloving” the penis and suturing the corpora cavernosum as well as the urethra and corpus spongiosum.

The man was fired three days later.

At a six-month checkup, the man reported that his sex life had resumed without any problems and his penis had returned to normal.

The doctors said only penile fractures are uncommon.

And they ‘rarely’ involve all three ‘erectile bodies’ – the two corpora carvenosa and corpus spongiosum.

Penile fractures are most common during sex, but can also happen during masturbation or if a man rolls over in his sleep, doctors said.

The impact when the patient’s penis hit his partner’s perineum must have been “very high” to cause “such a serious fracture,” they added.