Can you feel a condom stuck inside you?

Can you feel a condom stuck inside you?

It might feel slippery and hard to grab. If you feel the condom but can’t pull it out yourself, a nurse or doctor might have to step in. You can always contact your local Planned Parenthood health center for help.

Can a condom get stuck in your cervix?

A condom can’t get in a girl’s cervix. But if a condom does break, it (or, if it breaks off, a part of it) can remain inside the vagina. This can cause irritation, discharge, bad odor, or an infection. If you can’t remove a condom or a broken piece of condom, see your doctor or nurse.

How can condoms be used incorrectly?

Some of the most frequent mistakes include putting a condom on partway through intercourse or taking it off before intercourse is over, failing to leave space at the tip of the condom for semen, and failing to look for damage before use.

What should you do if the condom gets stuck inside you?

If you have succeeded in taking out the condom, be sure you cleanse yourself well and immediately take a morning-after pill. This will decrease the possibly of you getting pregnant, as the contents of the condom could have slipped out while stuck inside you.

What happens if you lose your Condom?

Even though the lost condom probably won’t pose an immediate health risk, there are other things to think about—like pregnancy and STIs. “If you realize a condom has fallen off inside of you and you’re counting on it for birth control, that’s not good, since leakage could potentially cause pregnancy,” warns Dr. Dweck.

Can I get my condom retrieval in urgent care?

During daytime hours, you could call your gynecologist to see if they can squeeze you in, but an urgent care center would be equipped to handle a condom retrieval as well. The procedure would be somewhat like a pap smear, Dweck noted. A doctor would use a speculum to open your vagina and remove the condom with a small instrument.

What should you do if semen comes out of a condom?

What you should do once it’s out. You may need some tests or medication because of the risk of pregnancy or sexually transmitted infections. It’s possible some semen seeped out of the condom while it was inside you, Dweck said.

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