1. Worry and fear
Before surgery, patients often lack a correct understanding of their own diseases and surgery, fearing that the doctors' skills are not good; Worried about wound inflammation; Worried about improper anesthesia methods and inadequate anesthesia during surgery; Worried that removing stitches after surgery would cause unbearable pain; Parents of young patients worry that poor penis development after surgery may affect their child's quality of life in the future; Adults are afraid that the effect of surgery is not ideal and affecting sexual life can endanger the relationship between husband and wife.
2. Shyness and nervousness
Due to the constraints of traditional concepts, adult patients may experience nervousness and shyness when exposing their private parts of the body. During surgery, they tend to be overly focused, nervous, and weak willed. Doctors may not tell the truth when testing the anesthetic level, and may also speak of pain without pain, in order to encourage doctors to use more anesthetic drugs. Most underage patients cry and fear, and cannot cooperate well with surgery. When the surgery is underway, they may experience irritability and hope that the surgery will be completed as soon as possible. When the surgery is completed, they are worried that the pain will be unbearable after the anesthetic fails; Dare not drink water or urinate. Afraid of polluting the wound while urinating, and afraid of not being able to urinate.
3. Hope and confusion
Due to a lack of medical knowledge, patients' ability to control postoperative pain and the nursing of incisions by patients and their families have generated confusion. I hope the surgery will be successful, but I also have doubts about whether the surgery will achieve the expected results.