With all the understandable fear of tip erosion that has been expressed in this forum, it got me wondering why are the distal tips (and even more so the proximal tips in the crus) so pointed in the inflatable implants?
The only reason I can think of for this shape is to allow the implant cylinders to be pulled through the corpus cavernosum more easily.
However, my engineering training and experience tells me that this shape is the worst one that is capable of withstanding the point load caused by the axial force during thrusting.
Some members(sic) talk of the more comfortable round tips of malleable implants, a shape that I would have thought is the optimum design to reduce the likelihood of tip erosion and pain since the load is spread over a much larger area of tissue.
Has anyone any information on the reason for this design or experience with a IPP followed by a MPP?
Why are the IPP tips so pointed?
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Why are the IPP tips so pointed?
RALP with 75% nerve sparing 10/24.
Some tumescence from 5 weeks post op. Erection improved with pills, stalling @ 60%
Keen to get frisky with young wife again. Getting Rigicon 10AX in 4/25.
Puzzled why SPL is 17 cm, but VEDL is only 14 cm (now 15).
Some tumescence from 5 weeks post op. Erection improved with pills, stalling @ 60%
Keen to get frisky with young wife again. Getting Rigicon 10AX in 4/25.
Puzzled why SPL is 17 cm, but VEDL is only 14 cm (now 15).
- duke_cicero
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- Joined: Tue May 28, 2024 2:58 pm
Re: Why are the IPP tips so pointed?
For what it's worth, my surgeon Laurence Levine has said that the IPP and MPP have essentially the same rate of erosion, and that success depends on the surgeon's technique and not so much on the device itself. But yes, I've wondered the same thing. Seems like a lot of people on this forum feel they're experts in physics, prosthetic urology, and engineering without really addressing the basics, or the recent literature. There is going to be pressure inside the tissues no matter what device you have, simply because you have something inside your corpora.
Also, per Coloplast's own data: around 80% of Titan patients are diabetic. Failures due to erosion or infection have a lot to do with diabetic symptoms.
Also, per Coloplast's own data: around 80% of Titan patients are diabetic. Failures due to erosion or infection have a lot to do with diabetic symptoms.
Born 1990. ED since age 20 after a bicycle accident. Coloplast Genesis malleable implanted December 2024. Read my implant journal here.
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Re: Why are the IPP tips so pointed?
The dumbest design ever
42 ED for 9 years vl after a fall. Pre implant 8 1/4 bp x 6 1/8 ish
Clavell titan 26+1 rte…post op very excited: 8 5/8” x 6 1/4” (7” base)
Starting to lose some length
Clavell titan 26+1 rte…post op very excited: 8 5/8” x 6 1/4” (7” base)
Starting to lose some length
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Re: Why are the IPP tips so pointed?
Doggedly_positive wrote:The only reason I can think of for this shape is to allow the implant cylinders to be pulled through the corpus cavernosum more easily.
But also, both the distal and proximal ends of the corpora cavernosa are narrower at the ends. The shape of the implant cylinders are manufactured to be close to the same length and shape as the corpora, since the intent is to implant cylinders that are the same length as the corpora, but not oversized.
The distal and proximal ends of the AMS implants are somewhat more rounded than the Coloplast cylinders. But from what I've read elsewhere on this site, the risk of erosion at the distal end of the cylinders seems to be related to an implant cylinder that was oversized rather than the shape of the distal end of the cylinders. Maybe guys on FT who have had both an AMS and Coloplast implant can opine as to whether one brand's cylinder tips are more comfortable or functional than the other.
GM(73) ED for past 10 years. Before: 6.0"L, 5.5"G. After (30 days): 5.5"L, 5.25"G. AMS CX MS pump 18cm/17.5cm on 1/29/25 by Dr Clavell in Houston.
viewtopic.php?f=6&t=25902
viewtopic.php?f=6&t=25902
Re: Why are the IPP tips so pointed?
Someone posted an MRI of a floppy glans penis once.
The distal ends of the corporas were shaped exactly the same as the implant cylinders. Just 2 cms short.
The distal ends of the corporas were shaped exactly the same as the implant cylinders. Just 2 cms short.
Re: Why are the IPP tips so pointed?
For the Coloplast Genesis MPP, their marketing messages highlight these reasons:
1) Fits small corporotomies
2) Offers a better fit
3) Provides a natural aesthetic result
4) Ensures glans support
What strikes me is that they focus on aesthetics and fit rather than patient comfort. Well, no one wants floppy glans either, so it's a toss!
1) Fits small corporotomies
2) Offers a better fit
3) Provides a natural aesthetic result
4) Ensures glans support
What strikes me is that they focus on aesthetics and fit rather than patient comfort. Well, no one wants floppy glans either, so it's a toss!
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Re: Why are the IPP tips so pointed?
not going to lie, when i first started pumping damn those tips hurt
36 year old with 28cm coloplast titan with 125cc Reservoir, lock out with 0 Rear tip extender and pump
Suffered from Combined arterial insufficiency and corporo-venous occlusive erectile dysfunction and Peyronie disease
Had a 35 degree curve
Suffered from Combined arterial insufficiency and corporo-venous occlusive erectile dysfunction and Peyronie disease
Had a 35 degree curve
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Re: Why are the IPP tips so pointed?
Implant2025 wrote:Doggedly_positive wrote:The only reason I can think of for this shape is to allow the implant cylinders to be pulled through the corpus cavernosum more easily.
But also, both the distal and proximal ends of the corpora cavernosa are narrower at the ends. The shape of the implant cylinders are manufactured to be close to the same length and shape as the corpora, since the intent is to implant cylinders that are the same length as the corpora, but not oversized.
The distal and proximal ends of the AMS implants are somewhat more rounded than the Coloplast cylinders. But from what I've read elsewhere on this site, the risk of erosion at the distal end of the cylinders seems to be related to an implant cylinder that was oversized rather than the shape of the distal end of the cylinders. Maybe guys on FT who have had both an AMS and Coloplast implant can opine as to whether one brand's cylinder tips are more comfortable or functional than the other.
I would imagine that those same same ends of the corpora are softer and more flexible than the implant cylinder tips, which leads me to believe that they would easily adapt to rounder tips.
In any case, once erosion has started, the corpora tip shape surely becomes irrelevant as the cylinder has now escaped that intended location, so would the best shape to slow further erosion not be one that spreads the load over a wider area?
RALP with 75% nerve sparing 10/24.
Some tumescence from 5 weeks post op. Erection improved with pills, stalling @ 60%
Keen to get frisky with young wife again. Getting Rigicon 10AX in 4/25.
Puzzled why SPL is 17 cm, but VEDL is only 14 cm (now 15).
Some tumescence from 5 weeks post op. Erection improved with pills, stalling @ 60%
Keen to get frisky with young wife again. Getting Rigicon 10AX in 4/25.
Puzzled why SPL is 17 cm, but VEDL is only 14 cm (now 15).
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