you will occasionally read reports here of men who have implants by surgeons who are not considered “high-volume“. In some of those reports, the men indicate that they were not well trained or informed about what to expect post surgery. Hence, they come here to Franktalk to learn how to cycle. I’ve seen reports on here where one man’s doctor did not give him any instruction at all, and only discovered the form several months after his surgery. He never realized he even needed to cycle. I feel sorry for such individuals. You need information, and a lot of it to make this successful.
Apart from when to cycle, one of THE most important factors is that you use a high-volume surgeon.
I’ll give you an analogy.
I am a professional airline captain. I have both military and commercial flying experience, over 26,000 hours in the cockpit in my career. 40 years of experience. I am that guy you see with gray hair on his temples, who has the “look“ of someone who has been around a while, and I have.
All professional pilots know the basic standard operating procedures. but doesn’t it stand to reason that after 40 years of hands-on flying experience, that, in addition to the basics, I would have picked up many techniques and methods to fine-tune the basic requirements, and that my experience would have exposed me to almost every situation imaginable? Emergencies, malfunctions, hazardous, mountainous, terrain, severe weather, anything you can think of really. I have experienced it, successfully.
While the new pilot at the company is trained and considered competent, in whose hands would you feel more comfortable with with your family? that is why in the traditional paradigm of cockpit cruise, it is ideal to have a highly trained, and competent first officer, paired with a much more highly experienced captain. The first officer is perfectly capable of doing everything that the captain does, but frankly, who ultimately do you want to have in charge and taking responsibility for the flight? I consider surgeons to not all be the same, just because they say they can do an implant. Choose one with LOTS of experience. They’ve seen it all.
And in whose hands would you feel most comfortable with with your one and only penis?
So that is the most important consideration. Infrapubic, or Penoscrotal, in the hands of either, will, in all likelihood, give you a great outcome. The high-volume surgeons have seen it all. Every kind of anatomy, and every kind of situation. they too, have learned their own techniques and methods to maximize your chances for a great outcome.
Pinot, scrotal, or in for pubic, in my mind now there is no “right choice“. The men who have had both here, with high-volume surgeons, report, good results.
Back to your question about when the cycle. we are all over the map in terms of when to start cycling. As others have mentioned, Dr. EID, the patriarch of implants, starts his penis scrotal patients are only three days. And I’ve also read some reports from his patients that it hurts like hell. I can imagine.
My doctor also uses the Penoscrotal approach. Instead of cycling at three days, he mitigates the encapsulation of your corpus cavernosum by inflating the implant to about 60% and leaving it that way for six weeks. The overwhelming number of his patients who right here report a good outcome. After six weeks, give or take a few days, we then start cycling.
I’m not here to cheerlead from my doctor. I’m here to advocate for you, for a successful outcome for you, and for your happiness.
So my bottom line is, use a high-volume, well regarded doctor, and just do what he says. Regardless, of which doctor one chooses, those of us here who use the most reputable surgeons consistently have good outcomes, there are exceptions, but that 90+ percent “satisfaction rate“, is more likely to be yours by choosing the right surgeon, and simply doing what he says. I would not worry too much about when the cycling starts, just do what he says, and you’ll be fine.
How important is it to start cycling as soon as possible?
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Re: How important is it to start cycling as soon as possible?
Active, athletic 63 years old. Sexually, still 33 in my mind and spirit. Pills and injections all worked, until they didn’t. Diagnosed with veinous leakage in 2022. Coloplast Titan. 22 CM. No RTE. Peno-scrotal. Implanted 1/4/23. Dr. Clavell.
Re: How important is it to start cycling as soon as possible?
I had a infrapubic surgery 4 weeks ago tomorrow and have been cycling for 2 weeks. It was hard at first like everyone says but it is easier now. I still can't pump one handed yet but the bulb doesn't slip around in my nut sack because I figured out the best hand positions. But that's just me. Like everyone here says. Everyone is different.
Best of luck to you my friend.
Best of luck to you my friend.
69 years old. Had Full ED for 3 years. Tried pills and injection.
Had my infrapubic implant surgery March 17 2023 with AMS 700 LGX. (so far so good)
Had my infrapubic implant surgery March 17 2023 with AMS 700 LGX. (so far so good)
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Re: How important is it to start cycling as soon as possible?
SwissTalk wrote:As I've been told, the peniscrotal surgery leads to a longer healing time than infrapubic. Which meanss that infrapubic guys are cleared for cycling way earlier. How important is it to start cycling as early as possible for a good outcome in terms of size preservation?
Or to put it differently, does infrapubic leads to better outcome becaus you can cycle earlier?
Hakky did mine penoscrotal his usual clear time is 1 week but he allowed me to do the cycling with his patient advocate at 3 days been cycling everday since. Painful yes but as I understand it that is part of the process.
33 HG deformity now Titan OTR 24cm XL + 1 cm RTE's Length 7.25in/ Girth 6in (midshaft) Dr. Hakky 4/4/23
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