nomad1 wrote: Hoddle10-
Hoddle10 is right. In fact all these procedures are new, unproven and not entirely safe. PMMA fits this bill just the same. Therefore, no one will know for quite some time how this will turn out. However, unless you have gone through what RKC and I did with Alloderm (and you may have for all I know)...there comes a time when you have to fix it. Status quo was just unacceptable. For me, there was no waiting any longer...I had problems and they needed to be fixed so I could get on with my sex life.
There is another issue here as well though, which is fixing it can lead to real problems also. I\'ve got first hand experience of this, as after over a decade, I decided to have the fat (I had
FFT in 1997) removed. But when the fat came out it took some of the fascia with it and now the shaft skin doesn\'t move freely. Gary Alter has written about the same thing happening with dermal matrix grafts like Alloderm/Belloderm. Correcting a damaged fascia is actually pretty difficult and not always successful. Lasttime also had this happen to him when his Elist implant was removed. Alter basically recommends that unless there is severe deformity to just leave it. I felt as if I had to fix it, as you did with your Alloderm, but now I\'m left with other problems that are maybe even worse!
In my opinion, I\'d avoid surgery altogether. If, like me, you are apprehensive about the longer terms results of
PMMA (which is non surgical), then wait a few years and see what happens. But personally I don\'t think anyone should have surgery. There are obviously many success stories with Alloderm, Belloderm,
Dermal Grafts,
FFT, PLGA scaffolds and even some with the Elist implant. But over all the numbers just aren\'t high enough and I\'ve concluded that surgery and the penis just don\'t mix at all well. I tired of reading depressing stories, or receiving PM\'s from guys who feel devastated by the effects of surgery gone wrong. I honestly think that in the longer term (3 years +) less than 50% of guys are happy with the results of their surgery and many feel like their lives have been destroyed because of it. When you think of how the penis works, the importance of good blood flow, nerves and sensation it makes sense that it is an organ that is highly susceptible to damage during the surgical and healing process.
I\'m really pleased you\'ve had such a great result, but personally I really hope it doesn\'t inspire others to follow you under the knife.