MsSaskia -> RE: testes sac inflation (8/28/2008 2:33:01 AM)
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I've done it several times in smaller and larger amounts, on men and women, on various body parts. I don't recall how many CCs of fluid was in the largest saline bag I've used, but it did leave the person I was sufflating/injecting with a sac the size of a grapefruit and a cock the size of ... trying to think of a good comparison... a sweet potato. He reported that the saline was absorbed into his body completely a couple of days later. Having a large enough syringe to draw the fluid into is helpful and saves having to refill lots of little syringes over and over again. Getting the saline into the syringe is challenging if you don't have a lot of hand strength. Snipping a small hole in the top of the saline bag (assuming you have it hanging and are drawing from the flange at the bottom) keeps you from having to fight vacuum and makes refills easier. I use 18-20ga needles to draw fluid out. The same size can be used to inject, but leaves bigger holes that can lead to a bit of leakage, but not much. Using smaller guage needles means it takes longer to refill syringes, and longer to get fluid under the skin. I change out needles after every couple of draws/injections because they get dull quickly and, depending on the thickness of the skin you're poking, the smaller ones have a way of bending. Also, butterfly needles are very helpful because it's hard to hold the syringe really steady if you jab directly into the skin, and a wiggling needle is a potentially bendy needle and definitely a cutting-tissue-under-the-surface needle, which just makes things messy. Getting all the bubbles out of the syringe is more than a good idea: people get all snippy about aneurisms and aftercare is ::cough:: a challenge. And by challenge, I mean death happens. I'd suggest avoiding scenes that end in death, but I don't wanna get all MKIOK/YKIFU about it. [;)] One kind of entertaining thing to note is that saline likes to migrate once it's in the body. You get a nice, fully puffed up area all done and start poking at it (cuz it's FUN), or even just leave it alone, and gravity and a person's movements will have the saline very slowly shifting around. It also starts to absorb pretty quickly, so smaller amounts, injected slowly, don't always get the dramatic results a lot of people like. I don't always use saline to make big distended areas of the body, but sometimes just to make smaller areas (like nipples) very puffy and hypersensitive. I haven't tried anything on the face yet, but I know some people do that. Using refrigerated saline can be another way to do sensation/temperature play. I wouldn't put it in the freezer and risk putting extremely cold liquid anywhere near someone's organs or risk killing cells by freezing them, but a little chill on an already cool liquid has been low-risk so far. I haven't tried heating it up and don't intend to. DO read as much as you can on BME sites. If there's someone in your community that does saline play, ask if you can observe one of their scenes sometime or whether they'll teach you and supervise while you do your first injection. Good luck!
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