LeRoastBeef wrote:So, if you leave the reservoir or erectile chambers uninflated for a significant period of time you will have scar tissue develop around the empty vessels, and this will restrict their filling. The idea therefore is to keep cycling between both to prevent this from happening.
This is my understanding, so correct me if I am wrong.
The issue is that you can't have both full at the same time due to limited fluid. So you must cycle. You can't cycle too much at the start because....things are healing and cycling would jeopardise the healing process? Is that right?
If that is the case, would it not be a possible to fully fill the entire hydraulic system so that both the reservoir and the erectile tubes are both inflated, leave it like that until scar tissue formation and recovery is complete, and they remove the required volume of fluid from the system?
Presumably one could do this by reponing the incision in the scrotum and draining it through the pump system.
Or something....I don't know it's just occurred to me and presumably it doesn't work or they would do it already.
Am I overlooking something really obvious here and being stupid? I'm not a medic or an engineer so i have no idea of these things. It just seems like an obvious solution to me.
My thoughts exactly. I posed that question to Dr. Eid in trhe summer of 2017 and he did not think it necessary, as it would entail another (albeit minor) surgical procedure to drain the excess fluid.
Still, the excess fluid could be drained in a number of different ways, and not necessarily even from the closed system, but rather an auxiliary "spacer" reservoir. And the draining would not have to be at the scrotum (which Dr. Eid suggested would entail too much risk of infection) but at the reservoir. There are any number of ways this could be accomplished, even without opening the skin (the excess fluid, being sterile saline, is easily absorbed into the body).
But, I suppose the extra work and design is not justified by the marginal benefit.
The Italian study you mention did cite that pain at early activation to prevent the "Coffin Effect" was a factor in a high dropout rate, so perhaps some time in the future Coloplast or AMS might re-think the possibilities.