No.
Part of the surgery involves removal of the seminal vesicles, which means no sperm can be produced.
The man will still achieve sexual orgasm, minus ejaculation.
A prostatectomy is the surgical removal of a man's prostate and the diseased seminal vesticles, if the cancer has spread outside of the prostate; otherwise only the full prostrate will be removed.
Depending on the man, they should make sperm his entire life unless they are removed or he develops certain glandular conditions.
When a man is not able to produce healthy sperms could be of many reasons. Some factors might be genetic. Taking foods that will aid the prostrate health can be beneficial in such a condition.
The man's ability to produce sperm should be unaffected by the removal of his prostate, since the sperm is made in the testicles. Having said this, the prostate does make some of the fluid in the ejaculate (about 25-35%). So a man who has had his prostate removed may notice a decrease in the amount he ejaculates. Also, depending on the way the prostate is removed, the nerves that feed the penis may be damaged, and though he makes sperm, may find it difficult to have an ejaculation, or even become aroused.
Yes. A doctor will extract sperm from the man and implant the sperm in the women to fertilize an egg, or extract the sperm and through IVF, extract an egg from the women, fertilize it and implant it back into the woman.
It doesn't, At a certain age a man starts to produce sperm and what happens to it does not have any real effect on the teenager. It is being found however that regular masturbation in the early years turns out to be good in avoiding prostrate problems in older years.
Not if only one testicle is removed. You can produce sperm just fine with only one testicle
Go to a clinic and have his sperm count taken? or just get it on everyday....see what happens...
It can bring about some ejaculation.
There is no testicle fluid in the sac. The testicles create sperm and this is released when a man ejaculates. Hope this helps.
No, there will not. Although a man will no longer be able to impregnate a woman (allowing his sperm to reach a woman's fertilized egg) with his testicles removed, there is an easier and much faster procedure to stop a man from impregnating a woman in which the Vas Deferens (tubes leading from the testicles to the penis) can be cut and tied together known as a vasectomy.
3 to 5 days, usually. I've heard of them living as long as 8 days.