If you’re considering a permanent contraceptive solution, it’s important that you arm yourself with all the details you need to make an informed decision. Choosing this kind of contraception is a big step, and you’ll want to feel confident in whatever you decide.

To help you navigate your options, here’s an overview of the types of permanent contraceptive solutions available.

Traditional Vasectomies

During a traditional vasectomy, a part of each vas deferens tube—through which sperm travels from the testes to the urethra—is cut using a scalpel, tied, and put back into the scrotum. Then, both ends of the vas deferens are closed up with stitches. With this procedure, either one or two incisions must be made to expose the tubes from the testes.

This is done under local anesthesia or with conscious sedation plus local anesthesia. In the case of the former, pain medicine is injected directly into the scrotum with a needle. In the case of the latter, also referred to as “twilight sedation,” patients receive sedating medications in addition to local anesthesia to relieve anxiety.

No-Needle, No-Scalpel Vasectomies

No-needle, no-scalpel vasectomies, as their name implies, are minimally invasive procedures. With this type of vasectomy, a “hydrospray”—used for many dental procedures—is used to numb the area instantly.

In traditional vasectomies, the next step would be making a tiny opening in the scrotum so that the vas deferens could be cut with a scalpel, tied, and put back into the scrotum. With the no-needle, no-scalpel method, however, no scalpel is needed. Instead, a single, tiny puncture is made, with no stitches or sutures required. The entire procedure takes about 10 minutes.

This option greatly reduces any risk of bruising and scarring as well as any pain or discomfort during and after the vasectomy.

Female Permanent Contraception

If you’re considering permanent contraception with a female partner, you may have looked into tubal ligation as well. Commonly referred to as “tube tying,” tubal ligation also permanently prevents pregnancy.

During this procedure, the fallopian tubes are cut, tied, or blocked in order to prevent the eggs, which are released by the ovaries, from traveling through the fallopian tubes into the uterus, where they then could be fertilized by sperm.

Tubal ligation, which involves making incisions in the abdomen, can be performed after childbirth or in tandem with other abdominal surgeries, including C-sections. Risks include damage to the bowel, bladder, or major blood vessels; continued pelvic or abdominal pain; and infected incisions.

This procedure—which is more complex, riskier, and more painful than vasectomies—isn’t right for everyone, and women with diabetes, obesity, or a history of other pelvic or abdominal surgeries may not be good candidates.

Learn More

The San Diego Vasectomy Center (SDVC) is proud to serve as a leading provider of no-needle, no-scalpel vasectomies as well as no-pain vasectomies, in which Exparel, a powerful, long-lasting anesthetic, is provided for three days after the procedure, allowing patients to resume their usual activities with minimal discomfort.

To learn more about your options for permanent contraception or to set up a consultation, reach out to the SDVC team today.

242019Oct

An Overview of Permanent Contraception

An Overview of Permanent Contraception

If you’re considering a permanent contraceptive solution, it’s important that you arm yourself with all the details you need to make an informed decision. Choosing this kind of contraception is a big step, and you’ll want to feel confident in whatever you decide. To help you navigate your options, here’s an overview of the types…

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232019Sep

Five Questions to Ask Yourself When Considering a Vasectomy

Five Questions to Ask Yourself When Considering a Vasectomy

Getting a vasectomy is a major life decision—one that should be made only after giving it the proper forethought and attention it deserves. If you are considering a vasectomy, there’s more to think about than merely whether you want more, or any, children. To help you make an informed decision, below are five key questions…

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Three Important Benefits to Having a Vasectomy

Three Important Benefits to Having a Vasectomy

If you’re considering a vasectomy, then you are likely already aware of at least the basic benefits of the procedure. Whether a vasectomy takes place is entirely up to the patient and his partner, if applicable. Family planning decisions are deeply personal, and as you complete your research on the procedure, we invite you to…

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312019Jul

How to Prepare for Your Vasectomy Consultation

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Chances are your life consists of a busy schedule with little free time for appointments outside of your daily routine. In order to make life easier for our patients, we’ve prepared a quick, helpful guide on how to prepare for a vasectomy consultation in as few steps as possible while also being able to take…

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What Happens If I Want a Vasectomy Reversal?

What Happens If I Want a Vasectomy Reversal?

Even though men are strongly encouraged to consider a vasectomy as permanent contraception, circumstances can change. There are many reasons why a man would choose to undergo a vasectomy reversal – perhaps you’re enjoying a new marriage or relationship and wish to have children, or maybe there are complications stemming from the original vasectomy procedure…

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222019May

Five Things You Probably Don’t Know about Vasectomies

Five Things You Probably Don’t Know about Vasectomies

Assumptions about what a vasectomy is, what it feels like to undergo the procedure, your sex life after the procedure, and whether you can produce semen ever again tend to run wild, thanks to many of the TV shows and movies we watch that approach the subject. A lot of fear that men have about…

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232019Apr

Why Do Fears of Vasectomies Persist?

Why Do Fears of Vasectomies Persist?

Many men who attend vasectomy consultations are relieved to learn that the procedure does not involve the amount of pain or the difficult recovery that they imagined. Pop culture is guilty of dramatizing many medical procedures in ways that are both unhelpful and unrealistic, and vasectomies are still one of the most overdone plot points…

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252019Mar

Vasectomy Alternatives: What Are My Options?

Vasectomy Alternatives: What Are My Options?

For couples considering whether having a vasectomy is the right decision for their family-planning needs, the question of whether options other than the procedure are viable may come up. There are vasectomy alternatives you can consider, and ultimately it is up to you and your partner as to which option is best for your relationship….

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252019Feb

How to Talk to Your Friends about Having a Vasectomy

How to Talk to Your Friends about Having a Vasectomy

Whether to undergo a vasectomy procedure is a personal decision. If you decide to keep it to yourself and your partner, that’s completely acceptable. Some men might feel like asking friends for advice before the vasectomy, while others might want to share their experience to help friends better understand the procedure. If you feel comfortable…

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302019Jan

Three Questions to Ask Yourself If You’re Considering a Vasectomy

Three Questions to Ask Yourself If You’re Considering a Vasectomy

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