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Durability study with 2,384 first implants

Posted: Sun Dec 13, 2020 10:14 pm
by brasileiro
I am 28 years old and I will have the implant with Eid next year. In most of the studies I see, revision-free durability is 70% in 10 years and 60% in 15 years. Look at this study: https://www.researchgate.net/publicatio ... wo_Decades
According to this study of 2,384 first implants, 68.5% lasted 10 years and 59.7% lasted 15 years without any revision! However, as I follow the forum, I realize that the durability has been much less. Do you think it's my impression or do the studies not tell the truth? Obviously my question does not have an exact answer.
Leave your opinion here, according to your perception today, how long do you think a prosthesis will last without needing to move anything, free of revisions? Thanks!

Re: How many years of durability, on average, in the opinion of the majority?

Posted: Sun Dec 13, 2020 10:22 pm
by Gt1956
Most men that don't have a problem. Don't search the internet for a forum to dicuss their problem. In other words. What you are seeing is dominated by guys that have needed revisions early. Also, some guys only need a pump replaced. Are they to be called a failed implant?
Don't be quick to assume that the ratios that you see here represent the implanted population at large.

Re: Durability study with 2,384 first implants

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2020 4:46 am
by irishguy
Gt is right!! Most are on here because of first implant or Very early revision or part breakdown!! I wouldn’t go statistically by this site

And to answer your question I am currently afew months away from 9 years and I can tell you I have absolutely over used it :-)

Re: Durability study with 2,384 first implants

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2020 4:58 am
by wolfcreek
Look at who funded the study (if you can find out). May be biased toward the manufacturers.....

Re: Durability study with 2,384 first implants

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2020 5:03 am
by wolfcreek
My first one wore out after just 4.5 years. Now the replacement has stopped working after just 2 years (sticky valve). Of course I am upset (and about $30,000 out of pocket), not to mention the pain, trauma, PTSD, disappointment, fear of the unknown, etc. which naturally comes from all of that. Who wouldn't be??

But if it had all gone as I had been told it should have gone, well then I would be on here singing the praises of the device (not being silent as the posters just above me have stated).

Re: Durability study with 2,384 first implants

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2020 7:57 am
by dg_moore
My first (and last) implant gave out after 12 years, during which it was inflated only a handful of times and never used once for sex.

Re: Durability study with 2,384 first implants

Posted: Mon Dec 14, 2020 9:35 am
by SW0110
I think the last estimates I saw where about 25,000 implants are installed each year in the US with about 70 percent of that share to ams.

A lot of the posts here deal with issues. I think that durability is a lot better than what someone might determine from reading the stories here. If everything is great you do not have to search for help with issues.

Re: Durability study with 2,384 first implants

Posted: Tue Dec 15, 2020 3:06 pm
by BmorePaul
Selection bias. Those with implant failures may be more likely to post here and those without issue not, so perception is skewed.

Re: Durability study with 2,384 first implants

Posted: Tue Dec 15, 2020 3:24 pm
by sweaterfan
It is disconcerting that some patients must endure multiple revisions over the course of just a few years, and sometimes only months, to replace failing components. I can't bring myself to believe that it's the person's anatomy or sheer bad luck causing him to be implanted with a faulty device more than once (the exception being the massive AMS recall). Perhaps the older models were more robust. That's certainly true of washing machines :).

I don't know the failure rate or durability of other prosthetic devices, like hips, legs and knees. They certainly get more use and sustain greater stress than penile implants.

Re: Durability study with 2,384 first implants

Posted: Tue Dec 15, 2020 6:04 pm
by whymenow
Well, if the durability rate is kind of low and some of you experienced problems after 2,5 years even, wouldn't it be better to get a malleable implant versus the inflatable one?