Flaccid gains are usually common, erect gains can be a bit more elusive. It is NOT a lie to say that you can achieve erect gains post-op, heck guys achieve gains using devices without ever having severed the ligament. The idea is that by severing the suspensory ligament, you knock out a significant impediment in acquiring it through the post-op stretching protocol.
Length in general (with or without surgery) can be elusive for a lot of people because it is also
anatomy-independent. In other words, just like our original endowment, there is a limit/cap on how much
inner-penis available to you, and very difficult (if not impossible) to ascertain until incisions are made.
And following the scene for nearly two decades, there are such people who can be described as
hard-gainers -- one's who simply don't respond to different methods & modes of elongation (often with no rhyme or reason). If you go to sites like ThundersPlace that has cataloged hundreds, if not thousands of penis exercise routines, you can look up posts using popular regimens or devices. You'll find that some guys gain a lot, some guys gain a bit, and some guys gain hardly at all, despite subscribing to the same methodology. Not suggesting you are a hard-gainer necessarily (no way for me to know), but just something for everyone to consider.
And as for follow-ups, that's usually on the patient. I've never had a Doctor put me on a prescription, or any Practitioner perform a procedure on me where they followed up weeks or months after. The assumption is that as long as you follow the protocol(s) as prescribed, you'll be fine. If you feel the treatment isn't working, then you generally are the one to follow-up. Would Physician or Physician Assistant follow-ups be nice? Sure but it would be nothing more than a courtesy, not a necessity. It's like if I bought a new TV or Sofa, I'd be surprised if the Store called me to see how it was going because it's a fair assumption I must like it if I haven't called them, and all they'd be doing is taking time out of their day confirming the obvious. Either way, perhaps they will take your feedback into consideration regarding follow-ups, but I'm personally saying that it isn't grounds to justify terms like "sleazy," especially since I know how professional they've been all these years.
The only exceptions where someone may follow-up with a Patient is a Psychologist or Psychiatrist, or after procedures that have critical windows (i.e. organ transplants); otherwise I don't think Physician or Physician Assistant's do much follow-up work unless requested. Even most Progress Reports indicate that if any follow-up was done, it's usually within the first few days. I've had 5+ (memory vague since it's been so long ago) appointments, either for girth and/or touch-ups, and not once was I contacted afterwards. I'd only do so to if I had a concern or complaint. That's ultimately why you (
@DunD
) called them, so that the problem can be identified, or whether or not to determine if a follow-up is necessary. Only when the patient sets up a follow-up appointment can the Physician be made privy to any requests of revisions, evaluations, and/or additions.
I'll forward your complaint
@DunD
to Rejuvall, I know Dr. Carney is peak Professional as they come, and he wouldn't want his work, nor his Brand's Customer relations to cast a dissatisfactory reflection. I would consider the follow-up appointment with them, see if they can identify the issue(s). Sorry to hear you aren't achieving erect gains, despite flaccid increases. I genuinely believe they want a happy Patient, so I think it would be fair to allow them to assess your situation before giving up. There are a myriad number of factors that could be at play (examples: limited inner-penis, limited or non-compliant skin, re-attached or partial severing of ligament, modifications to your stretching regimen, potentially a hard-gainer as described above, and other factors that a Reconstructive Urological Surgeon would know, like Dr. Carney).
Length is incredibly more complicated than girth, so please have patience and go through with a follow-up, see what can be identified. I'm wishing you the best of luck and I sincerely believe Dr. Carney has his patients' best interest in mind, as he has demonstrated that year after year through not only Progress Reports, but communications I've had with patients via back channels like PM's (the Forum's Private Message system) and Emails.