An Olympic Athlete Froze His Penis During a Cross-Country Skiing Race

beijing 2022 winter olympics

Anadolu AgencyGetty Images

An Olympic cross-country skier sustained a nasty injury while competing in the men’s freestyle mass race at the Winter Games in Beijing on Sunday. Due to concerns regarding the risk of frostbite, event organizers delayed the race, and reduced the skiing distance by 40 percent, cutting it from 50 km to 30 km.

However, Finnish athlete Remi Lindholm still suffered “unbearable” frostbite in an unfortunate area while completing the race, which he later described as one of the worst competitions he has ever taken part in. Lindholm reached the finish line in just under an hour and 16 minutes, and despite wearing under-layers, ended the race with a frozen penis.

“You can guess which body part was a little bit frozen when I finished,” Lindholm said in an interview with Finnish media. “It was one of the worst competitions I’ve been in. It was just about battling through.”

Frostbite occurs when sombody exposed to extreme cold, and blood vessels in the hands and feet will constrict in order to direct blood flow (and warmth) back to the center of the body. Without that warm blood flow, the skin temperature of the extremities will plummet—while this is most common in feet, in Lindholm’s case it affected his penis.

“When the body parts started to warm up after the finish, the pain was unbearable,” he added.

This is the second time that Lindholm has suffered a frozen penis while competing in a cross-country skiing event: he had the exact same injury during a race in Ruka, Finland, in 2021. Whether penile frostbite is an occupational hazard when participating in winter sports, or whether Team Finland needs to take a serious look at their athletes’ protective clothing, is unclear.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
More health systems turn to partnerships for hospital-at-home thumbnail

More health systems turn to partnerships for hospital-at-home

Skip to main content As hospital-at-home gains momentum, healthcare systems are increasingly turning to outside companies for help operating the programs. The hospital-at-home model, in which a patient receives acute-care treatment scheduled at home, has been around for decades, but the COVID-19 pandemic set off a swift wave of investment and growing utilization as inpatient beds
Read More
Looking Back, Moving Forward thumbnail

Looking Back, Moving Forward

“When we engage in nostalgia, we are not moving toward the past. We are bringing the past to the present to help us plan for the future. Nostalgia pushes us forward, not back,” writes nostalgia researcher and psychologist Clay Routledge in his book Past Forward: How Nostalgia Can Help You Live a More Meaningful Life.
Read More
Index Of News