emeraldgryphon
Posts: 122
Joined: 6/29/2007 Status: offline
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Remember that the sphincter muscle, while incredibly stretchable, is designed by nature to remain tightly closed. The internal sigmoid colon can hold quite a bit of material inside it, but you should choose a plug with as narrow a shaft base as possible to allow the sphincter to close as tightly as it can. The colon will also interpret that plug as material to be expelled. If you wish to retain a plug for any serious length of time without accidental expulsion, you should use a buttplug harness. Remember that the sphincter can dilate open very large - any plug large enough not to be expelled is too large for comfort. The plug will also risk becoming adhered to the interior colon if sufficient lube isn't used - do not use petroleum based lubes as the oil base is far too hard on the liver to metabolize. Water based lubes will naturally be absorbed by the body through the intestinal wall and will cause adhesion to the interior intestinal wall. Be very careful with any additives to your lube, especially if they are known irritants - the bowel is essentially a giant mucous membrane, and is easily inflamed. There is no "buffer zone" between the bowel and the bloodstream. Usually ingested materials have to pass the stomach and small intestine and experience digestion before absorption across the intestinal membrane occurs - but anything placed directly in the bowel can transfer directly across the intestinal membrane into the bloodstream. Depending on the substance you could literally be introducing it almost directly into your bloodstream, and thereby directly into your heart. In the case of irritants this could be harmful as it could cause muscular spasms in the heart that can cause arrhythmias such as atrial flutter or fibrillation, or more seriously, ventricular fibrillation, or even asystole causing death. As to the "chip/crisp" idea, I heartily recommend against it. Ever eaten a chip and stabbed yourself with the sharp edge? The same thing can happen much easier in your colon, especially considering that there are no teeth or jaws to break apart the chip. Lacerations in the bowel tract can lead to bowel perforations, diverticulosis, formation of bowel fistulas, necrosis of the bowel, even colostimization, sepsis and death.
< Message edited by emeraldgryphon -- 5/14/2012 3:57:15 PM >
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