Here are my findings that parasites cause hydroceles:
About 6 years ago I noticed one of my testicles was starting to grow a little
larger than the other. Within a few years it had doubled in size
and after a few more, was approaching triple proportions. A quick research on
the internet showed it to be testicular cancer or a benign hydrocele. I went to
a urologist to get a diagnosis. He said 1% of males have it. That’s a lot of
people! As he explained it, each of your testicles are surrounded within a fluid
sac. For some reason, one of the fluid sacs was filling up with more fluid than
the other.
Here was my first red flag of deception.
When I asked him what was causing it, he looked down, and said under his
breath as he slightly shook his head, “We don’t know what causes it!” I then
asked if it could be drained and he replied, “We don’t do that here! It would
just fill back up in a couple of months.” He suggested a surgery called a
hydrocelectomy that had weeks of recovery time. So I went home and started a
deep dive into a rabbit hole! After several weeks of 8-hour-a-day studies, I
found that each enclosed sac was fed with lymphatic fluid through a small
lymphatic artery called Tunis Vaginalis. Could it be that this tube was filling
the sac slowly with too much fluid? I thought for a minute and said No way
would your body leave stagnant lymph fluid anywhere without circulating it to a lymph node
for filtration. So I kept digging and I finally found a return line called the
Processus Vaginalis. It wasn’t that it was getting filled with too much fluid, it
was that the return line was clogged, preventing lymphatic circulation, and the
sac was swelling over time to hold all that fluid! The cause of that blockage in
the return line was the Brugia timori parasite!
Now I had already done almost a two-month treatment with the antiparasitic Banocide Forte,
so I concluded the Brugia timori parasites were probably dead, and if they
were, that the excess fluid would just keep circulating around with no way of
returning to a normal volume.
UPDATE! This I finally found a urology web site that finally admits
that hydroceles are caused by parasites after a YEAR of searching on and off.
Here is a copy and paste from the website:
Medication
Hydrocele treatment may include medications to treat
underlying infections associated with the condition. For
instance, if there is a bacterial infection in the scrotum,
antibiotics will be prescribed. Lymphatic filariasis occurs when
there’s an infection of worms or other parasites that will
contribute to the swelling of the scrotum. In this case, an
antiparasitic medication like Hetrazan will often resolve the
infection. Pain medications may also be used if the swelling
causes more than minor discomfort.
https://comprehensive-urology.com/mens- ... hydrocele/
Is this the only honest urologist! What's more profitable to them, a cheap anti-parasitic drug or a hydrocelectomy for thousands of dollars.
Hetrazan is also called Banocide Forte, which is available at
AllDayChemist.com.