1380anthony wrote:Rufian wrote:It seems the failure rate for these inflatables is high, not only are they more expensive, but the problem is always the tubing, the pump, that's what fails, is not the actual implant probably and that's the problem with these devices.
You would think they'd design something that is pretty much indestructible considering is inside the body, so if it develops a leak, you have to be opened up, pay again and go through the same crap again? That's horrible.
That works for the surgeons tho, more money for them and that's why they prefer these implants. They're not permanent they have an expiration date, they're more likely to fail. If it fails, it should be replaced for free, because 9 out of 10 is the surgeons fault.
Its akin to hair transplants, is not actually permanent, eventually you'll need more transplants, which is why the hair transplant industry is so huge, imagine if hair cloning came along? It'd be the end for them.
Wouldn't a malleable implant be a better option then? It will probably outlast all these inflatables, it may even last your lifetime
These surgeries are very expensive and they don't even last a lifetime, they quote 10 to 15 years if lucky? No way
The failure happens because of the desire of wanting to have a regular penis that goes hard and flaccid.
If I got these inflatable implants someday, I'd be afraid all the time that on day is going to fail.
This is the only thing that is holding me back and waiting to see what 2023 has for ED. These companies make these devices at low cost and then sell them for thousands just like smart phones. Men just are desperate because they have no other choice than to completely destroy whay is left of their corpus cavernosum. Ill probably get one since their is no other choice
What bugs me is that it is the same penile prosthesis from the 1970s and it is 2023 and now they are working on Bluetooth prosthesis.
Why is so hard to make and battery operated device that pushes blood and restraints it just like the Potency Flow? They can even make a new corpus cavernosum.
https://link.springer.com/article/10.10 ... 017-1582-2
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5312219/
The reality is that don't really want to cure ED since they make loooots of money out of it. Please don't get upset with me. It's just an opinion.
Hi
If it is sometimes frustrating to see how something that has an apparently simple solution, if we talk about plumbing, or transport of liquids through pipes, it is not possible to apply it to the human body.
Regarding the technology, I think it still lacks a bit of maturity and to solve some inconveniences.
Today it appears that there is no safe battery technology that can be placed intracorporeally (with the power to drive a pump head generating 22 pounds of pressure), without involving great risk of explosion, corrosion, or contamination by chemicals dangerous to life.
Intervening the flow of an artery, today is done passively, with the use of stents in selected cases in the arteries of the penis, when the flow is low, with variable results.
Doing it actively, with some electro-mechanical device, is already something much more complex, in order to maintain laminar flow, avoid coagulation and counter-pressure towards the heart, which I am sure none of us want to damage.
In my case, my corpus cavernosum was perfect, studied with Doppler, I had no problem, my problem was basically venous. So a replacement of my corpus cavernosum probably wouldn't have been beneficial.
ED is multifactorial, I believe that science and biomedical engineering have not stopped looking for a solution, I believe that not everything is a conspiracy
regards