Don’t let it be small.

The groin is a clinical common disease, which can be traced back to the birth of human beings — from the moment that humans are standing up, our abdominal inner organs (mainly small intestines, large membranes with larger activity) are piled up in our pelvic cavities under gravity, while the groinal pelvis on both sides is a relatively weak area within the pelvis, where they are able to come out of the abdominal cavity when the abdominal pressure is increased as a result of a variety of causes, i.e., the formation of abdominal giraffes in the groin, which is the reason why the groin is generally present on its feet, then shrinks back or becomes smaller. We can also see the wisdom of the ancients in the word “things”: It’s a disease. It’s not a tumor. It’s a disease that rises from the ground like mountains.

The diarrhea is relatively more visible among the elderly, as its formation is related, on the one hand, to local abdominal weakness and, more importantly, to increased chronic abdominal stress, both of which are related to ageing: As age increases, the contraction and intensity of these important abdominal structures, such as muscles, dysentery tissues, is self-evident, while chronic coughing, constipation, and the difficulty of excretion in the prostate, among other factors, can lead to abdominal stress. According to statistics, the incidence of groin among the elderly aged 60 and over is as high as 1 per cent, and as the ageing process accelerates, so is the number of groin patients. For patients of other ages (especially children and young adults), there are a number of congenital causes, such as abnormally weak local abdominal structures, gelatinic proteins and fibre synthesis abnormalities, as well as abnormally high abdominal stress due to special causes, such as pregnancy and childbirth in women, excessive abdominal force during exercise, etc.

It is impossible to heal once it has happened, like a dress that breaks a hole that cannot be restored, but it can be sewn to a patch, and so can the groin. The only effective cure for groin is surgery: returning the stench from a cascadron through a cascading lens or open surgery, and removing the cysts from the treatment with artificially synthesized patches to repair the defects in the groin. Many patients tend to have symptoms that are not visible when they first appear, local drummings are not too large or painful, and are therefore in no hurry to perform the surgery, but need to know, first, that the disease will not be good, will only grow over time, that the symptoms are becoming more visible, and that it will be performed sooner or later; secondly, the longer the gill appears, the larger the size of the stench, the greater the likelihood that the steroids will be bound to the herbs, the more difficult the operation will be, the higher the risk that the laxity will cause the intestinal cavity, and even the possibility of partial removal of the intestinal tube; thirdly, there is the possibility of an embedding, which, in the event of an immediate emergency care, is likely to result in the death of the intestation of the intestation, and, if the doctor fails or the time of the enzy is inappropriate, the local intestinal tube will be removed.

We therefore recommend that, once a groin is present, surgical treatment be considered, “not small, not small”. It is important not to listen to the false propaganda of unprovoked folk or irregulars: what does not have to do with surgery, needles, ointments … It is a small matter to use ineffectual tatters, and it is a small matter to mistreat that causes local adhesion, an increase in the risk of embedding, and the difficulty and risk of complications of subsequent surgery. As for the controversial use of herring belts, many doctors do not recommend wearing them, which is also due to the fact that the long-term wear of herring content is bound to the cylindrical giraffe, which affects subsequent surgical treatment, and which only slows the progress of the disease for a period of time immediately following the appearance of hernia, and does not have the effect of treating it, and when the hyenas are overstretching the hernia belt, it is less than a direct early surgery. So I think it applies only to patients who, for various reasons, cannot perform surgery in the short term and who are smaller than the aluminum, the proper wearing of which can effectively prevent the cylindrium from highlighting, mitigating symptoms, improving the quality of life and slowing the progress of the disease; but if the americium is larger or as the disease expands, the americium belt is no longer fully able to stop the cylindrical accent, the maximum possible operation for surgical treatment, and the relatively low-risk plaster surgery can be performed if the patient is in a poor state of health and is not able to perform a full luminoma.

Thank you for reading, and I hope it will help you.

Hair.