TheCanalGuy wrote:Hey brother @SearchingUsa
We are now at more than 7 weeks post your surgery, if I am not wrong, and we have no news from you. Have you been activated? Any issue? Have you given it a test drive?
Hope that everything is going well and as expected.
The short update is that I got the go-ahead from Dr. Clavell to start pumping at 4 weeks, as I had a wedding to attend and didn't want to have to wrestle my 70% erect dick into dress trousers.
I've mentioned in a previous update that the pump hardware had adhered to the front of my scrotum after surgery. There hasn't been much progress on that, and in the 6 week virtual follow-up Dr. Clavell prescribed me a course of anti-inflammatories to help promote separation, along with instructions to try and pry the scrotum off the hardware.
Over the past week there has been some progress. Previously, the fascia that thickly wrapped around the bulb and deflate button gave a very meaty feel to squeezing the bulb, and also made it difficult to feel the button and deflate it. With a lot of steady pulling and twisting, the fascia is now mostly separated from the bulb except for along one stubborn axis, and the deflate button is easy to locate and access.
However, the most prominent issue is that the tubing that runs from the pump to the inflatable rods is still firmly embedded in fascia along the front of my scrotum. As this tubing is rather firm, it juts forward prominently. Typically, our pelvis would be the 'hilt' of the penis, but in this case the hilt created by the tubing would hit a partner during penetrative sex. As the tubing tends to be the failure point, I'm not inclined to subject it to getting repeatedly slammed against a partner, so I won't be having sex until I can get the tubing to separate from the fascia in the scrotum.
When will that be? I don't know. I just took the last anti-inflammatory today, and I'll continue with my manual manipulation of the scrotum and the hardware. In the meantime, I'm pumping at least twice daily to try and maximize my size.
I remain optimistic that this will all work itself out with more time and effort. Unlike my ED that was only getting worse over time regardless of my efforts, I'm grateful that this is a problem that I can actually do something to help fix and will eventually be solved.