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TOPIC: Why You Shouldn’t Have to Plan on Filler Repair Work

Why You Shouldn’t Have to Plan on Filler Repair Work 2 days 21 hours ago #1308722459

  • Rejuvall
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We’ve noticed a lot of guys here talk about nodules, granulomas, or unevenness after penile filler like it’s just “part of the deal” and something everyone should expect to fix later. With our 25+ years of experience performing penile Girth enhancement injections with FDA-approved dermal fillers, we wanted to address this commonly held belief because while these problems are unfortunately common, they’re not inevitable — and they’re almost always preventable when the right materials, volumes, and techniques are used.

Why These Problems Happen in the First Place

1. Technique — It’s Not Just About the Tool or Depth
A lot of the public conversation focuses on whether a provider uses a cannula or a needle, or how deep the filler is placed. In reality, you can end up with nodules, granulomas, or unevenness with either tool and at virtually any depth. The tool and depth don’t make nearly as much difference as people think.

The key things that do matter:
  • Even distribution in small amounts rather than large blobs that can clump together.
  • Multiple passes and blending so the filler integrates smoothly.
  • Gentle tissue handling to minimize trauma and inflammation.

When filler is placed unevenly, in overly large deposits, or with excessive tissue trauma, your risk of irregularities goes way up — regardless of whether it’s deep or shallow.

2. Overfilling in a Single Session
This is one of the biggest contributors to the cases we end up repairing. Many practitioners will inject 15–20+ cc in a single session. That’s a lot of foreign material for the tissue to integrate at once, and it often leads to:
  • Clumping because the tissue can’t absorb the volume evenly.
  • Stronger inflammatory response, increasing granuloma risk.
  • Skin stretching or thinning that exaggerates any irregularities.

A slower, staged approach with smaller volumes allows the tissue to adapt and gives the provider a chance to build the result more precisely.

3. Material Choice
PMMA: Long-lasting but unforgiving. High-volume injections or poor placement can trigger granulomas that require surgical Removal or micro-aspiration. Steroids such as Kenalog can soften these lumps but will not dissolve them.
Hyaluronic Acid: More forgiving and dissolvable if needed, but overfilling or uneven distribution can still cause lumps.
Silicone oil: Should never be injected. It will migrate, cause chronic pain, infections, and severe disfigurement, and is extremely difficult or impossible to remove completely.

4. Perspective From Frequent Repair Work
At Rejuvall, we Repair more post-filler complications than just about any clinic out there — nodules, granulomas, unevenness, and other irregularities from all over the U.S. and abroad. The overwhelming pattern we see is that these problems almost always tie back to preventable factors: too much filler, uneven placement, or the wrong material.

Why It’s Not “Normal”
If a provider tells you that you should plan on needing Revision work after a filler session, that’s not an honest reflection of what’s possible with a careful, conservative approach. Yes, no procedure is risk-free — but properly planned injections with controlled volumes and sound placement can greatly reduce the odds of needing a fix later.

The Takeaway
Nodules, granulomas, and unevenness shouldn’t be viewed as an unavoidable cost of getting filler. They’re usually a sign that something in the process could have been done differently — and better. Prevention through good planning and careful technique is always easier (and less expensive) than Repair.

Final thought: If you’re considering filler, don’t just ask what product is being used — ask how much will be placed, how it will be distributed, and what the provider’s plan is to minimize the need for future repairs. Those answers will tell you a lot more about your risk than the tool or the injection depth ever will.

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Why You Shouldn’t Have to Plan on Filler Repair Work 1 day 14 hours ago #1308722502

Thanks @Rejuvall for the info you provide to the forum. I read about your method on your website and have some questions.

When you say "layers," does 1 "layer" = 1 syringe?

How long do you recommend waiting between sessions? If you want guys to start with two sessions of HA before even beginning Bellafill, that could be a super long process to reach the final stage?

I looked at your before/after pics on your website, and it's hard to tell what procedures were done for each set of pics. One thing that would be helpful is to have some picture collages that show the gradual progression over 3 or 4 or 5 sessions for guys who did two HA sessions and then moved to Bellafill sessions afterward. Right now, I'm having trouble visualizing what that would look like sequentially--like, how it would look at each stage of the process.

Thanks again!

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Why You Shouldn’t Have to Plan on Filler Repair Work 23 hours 7 minutes ago #1308722514

  • Rejuvall
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Thanks @Rejuvall for the info you provide to the forum. I read about your method on your website and have some questions.

When you say "layers," does 1 "layer" = 1 syringe?

How long do you recommend waiting between sessions? If you want guys to start with two sessions of HA before even beginning Bellafill, that could be a super long process to reach the final stage?

I looked at your before/after pics on your website, and it's hard to tell what procedures were done for each set of pics. One thing that would be helpful is to have some picture collages that show the gradual progression over 3 or 4 or 5 sessions for guys who did two HA sessions and then moved to Bellafill sessions afterward. Right now, I'm having trouble visualizing what that would look like sequentially--like, how it would look at each stage of the process.

Thanks again!


Always happy to answer questions!

Yes — in our system, one “layer” is one syringe. Most patients start with around six layers in their first session, give or take depending on their anatomy and goals.

We generally recommend about 90 days between sessions to let everything settle and integrate, although if inflammation is minimal you might be able to go a bit sooner. It does mean the process takes longer, but it also massively lowers the odds of problems down the line — and repairs can be far more costly and frustrating than just taking it slow from the start. We always say it’s better to walk in through the front door than have to come in through the side door later.

We stage it this way for a few reasons:

1) Lower initial risk – HA is far less likely to trigger inflammation and can be dissolved quickly if needed.
2) Allergy safety net – An allergic reaction to Bellafill (PMMA) can only be fixed surgically. Starting with HA first greatly reduces that risk.
3) Lower inflammatory response – PMMA as a first filler has a higher chance of causing inflammation, regardless of where or how deep it’s placed.
4) Aesthetic trial run – Some men just don’t like the way their penis looks or feels after filler. HA gives you the option to reverse it almost immediately.
5) Scar line problems – Every man who was circumcised as an infant has a circumcision line where the skin changes color and texture. Some are deep enough that they only reveal themselves after filler is added — and when they do, it makes the penis look drastically worse. We’ve seen this turn into some of the most upsetting (and expensive) repair cases we’ve ever handled. By going slow, we can spot and work around these problem areas before they ruin the final result.

And you’re right about the photos — we’ve been working on a better system for showing step-by-step progression so it’s easier to visualize how results build over multiple sessions. Because of HIPAA and how our files are organized, we can’t go back and relabel past photos that way, but we will be doing it with new cases going forward.
The following user(s) said Thank You: rodandstaff2025

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Why You Shouldn’t Have to Plan on Filler Repair Work 17 hours 4 minutes ago #1308722518

Thanks for your thoughtful response. On your point #5 regarding scar line, have you seen any difference in guys who were Circumcised as an adult (like I was)? Just curious.

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