Starting with N

Gotische Letter 'N' Tattoo
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Narrow foreskin, Non-libidoisme, Norlevo, Nuvaring,  Nymfomania. 

Narrow foreskin
Sometimes the foreskin is so narrow that you can not push it over the head. At birth, this is normal, because the opening is too small and then the skin is still attached. Usually, when a boy is about ten years old he fully retracted. In some boys this works not until they are sixteenth.
As a result of a narrow foreskin masturbating or fucking can be painful, smega can accumulate which can lead to inflammation, and sometimes a Spanish collar arise. 

Non-libidoïsm
See A-sexual.

Norlevo
Morningafterpill, you need to take this as soon as possible after unprotected sexual contact. The time of taking it makes much difference to the effectiveness. Do you take the pill within 24 hours then the chance that the pregnancy prevents much greater than if you wait 2 days.
There are two morning-after pills:
- Norlevo, within 72 hours after unprotected time should be taken, and
- Ulipristal, up to 120 hours after unprotected currently working.
Up to 72 hours are both equally reliable means, between 72 and 120 hours you should use Ulipristal.
Is too much time has elapsed, you can have a 'bad luck' IUD placed.

Nuvaring  
NuvaRing is the trade name for a combined hormonal contraceptive vaginal ring manufactured by Merck (formerly Schering-Plough, formerly Organon) that is available by prescription. It is a flexible plastic (ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymer) ring that releases a low dose of a progestin and estrogen over three weeks.
Use:
The currently approved NuvaRing regimen specifies insertion of the ring into the vagina for a three-week period. Insertion of the ring is comparable to insertion of other vaginal rings. The muscles of the vagina keep NuvaRing securely in place, even during exercise or sex. Women can check the contraceptive ring periodically with their finger.
Then removal of the ring for one week, during which the user will experience a menstrual period. The break week with NuvaRing is comparable to the placebo week for combined oral contraceptive pills ("the Pill"), and the contraceptive effect is maintained during this period.
In the case of accidental expulsion, the manufacturer recommends rinsing the ring with cool water before reinserting. If this does not happen the way it is supposed to, the risk of pregnancy is increased. Contraceptive efficacy is reduced if the ring is removed, accidentally expelled, or left outside of the vagina for more than three hours. If left outside of the vagina for more than three hours, the device is to be rinsed and reinserted immediately. If this occurs, the manufacturer recommends that a backup method of contraception be used until the ring has been used continuously for a subsequent seven days.
NuvaRing should not be used while breastfeeding. The hormones may pass to the baby through the milk, and it may decrease milk production.


Nymfomania
Or hypersexuality is extremely frequent or suddenly increased sexual urges or sexual activity. Hypersexuality is typically associated with lowered sexual inhibitions. Although hypersexuality can be caused by some medical conditions or medications, in most cases the cause is unknown. Medical conditions such as bipolar disorders can give rise to hypersexuality and alcohol and some drugs can affect social and sexual inhibitions in some people. A number of theoretical models have been used to explain or treat hypersexuality. The most common one, especially in the popular media, is the sexual addiction approach, but sexologists have not reached any consensus. Alternative explanations for the condition include compulsive and impulsive behavioral models.
The International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) of the World Health Organization includes “Excessive Sexual Drive” (coded F52.8), which is divided into satyriasis for males and nymphomania for females, and “Excessive Masturbation” (coded F98.8).
The American Psychiatric Association (APA) considered and rejected a proposal to add sexual addiction to its list of psychiatric disorders, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). A proposal to include a diagnosis called hypersexual disorder, simply describing the symptom without implying any specific theory, is under consideration for inclusion in the appendix of the DSM, but not in the main list of official diagnoses.
Some authors have questioned whether it makes sense to discuss hypersexuality at all, arguing that extreme sexual urges merely stigmatize persons who do not conform to the norms of their culture or peer group.


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