How likely is an implant failure?

The final frontier. Deciding when, if and how.
JH1982
Posts: 25
Joined: Fri Dec 16, 2022 5:47 pm

How likely is an implant failure?

Postby JH1982 » Sat May 06, 2023 8:58 am

Hi guys I’m heavily considering an implant as, while I might try Trimix I’m not a candidate for pills.

I’m quite scared but the failure of the implant.

I red horror stories about people needing multiple surgeries.

Apart from the nightmare of having to keep going under th knife the cost would just be unberable

And even if the implant was still guaranteed you’d still have to pay
- surgeon
- anaesthesia
- facility

So for me (being 40) the implant might be a very risky move considering my life expectation.

I know that is impossible to predict how many failures and new implants you’ll have but can you give me some details from your research, studies and personal experiences?

Hillywilly
Posts: 610
Joined: Thu May 12, 2022 11:03 am

Re: How likely is an implant failure?

Postby Hillywilly » Sat May 06, 2023 10:02 am

Look at the data. The opinions you’ll get here are not empirical evidence and thus are not very useful in making a decision.

The new titan will be on the market on 4 years hoping mine lasts at least that long.
33 HG deformity now Titan OTR 24cm XL + 1 cm RTE's Length 7.25in/ Girth 6in (midshaft) Dr. Hakky 4/4/23

Hillywilly
Posts: 610
Joined: Thu May 12, 2022 11:03 am

Re: How likely is an implant failure?

Postby Hillywilly » Sat May 06, 2023 10:07 am

& give injections a try first. I could have stuck with those but I noticed over time I had to increase my dose which to me made pretty good sense that I was doing more damage to my dick and I didn’t like it. That said some of the best sex ever was on injections. I have yet to be cleared for sex with the IPP 5 weeks out
33 HG deformity now Titan OTR 24cm XL + 1 cm RTE's Length 7.25in/ Girth 6in (midshaft) Dr. Hakky 4/4/23

JohnHC
Posts: 219
Joined: Mon Apr 24, 2023 9:35 am

Re: How likely is an implant failure?

Postby JohnHC » Sat May 06, 2023 4:04 pm

Try the injections first, an implant is the last resort. I was on injections but had to keep upping the dose and moving to a stronger compound over the years. Finally was on the strongest compound taking a huge dose and it wouldn't last longer than a hour and would sometimes not take so implant was last resort. Had mine implanted 3 weeks ago but I've got a defective implant or a line has become disconnected so I have to have revision surgery to either fix or replace the whole thing. Not fun, but it rarely happens that you'd have a issue with a implant, it's just the way my luck has always run that it happened to me, lol ....
AMS 700 CX 21cm x 12mm with 1.5cm RTE, MS pump, and Conceal Reservoir. Implanted on 4-12-2023 removed and replaced 6-22-23 with the same, 1st implant surgery had pinhole leak in left cylinder, second failure tubing at connector

Lost Sheep
Posts: 6163
Joined: Mon Jul 04, 2016 11:16 pm

Re: How likely is an implant failure?

Postby Lost Sheep » Sat May 06, 2023 7:19 pm

JH1982 wrote:Hi guys I’m heavily considering an implant as, while I might try Trimix I’m not a candidate for pills.

I’m quite scared but the failure of the implant.

I red horror stories about people needing multiple surgeries.

Apart from the nightmare of having to keep going under th knife the cost would just be unberable

And even if the implant was still guaranteed you’d still have to pay
- surgeon
- anaesthesia
- facility

So for me (being 40) the implant might be a very risky move considering my life expectation.

I know that is impossible to predict how many failures and new implants you’ll have but can you give me some details from your research, studies and personal experiences?

Before answering your question, I will address Hillywilly's post. Yes, the data you get here is definitely anecdotal and self-selected (filtered because the men here are participating voluntarily because of ongoing issues - some because they want to help, but many because they are experienceing troubles with their implants). Self-selection/filtering skews the data you will gather. But it has to be noted that all statistics are composed of anecdotes. To be classified as valid statistics, the data has to be unbiased, unskewed and not otherwise slanted. That is, randomized. So, read the medical literature in peer-reviewed legitimate journals. It can be hard to slog through the technical terminology, but worth it.

Then consider this, which I think you should add to your decision making criteria.

If an implant were a guaranteed one-shot deal. Once you have one, it is the only one your will ever have. If that were the case, would you like to have sex starting from the age of 40 years or have sex from the age of 60? Consider also that you could be hit by a bus at the age of 42. Answering that question might make your initial question about revisions irrelevant.
Lost Sheep
AMS LGX 18+3 Nov 6, 2017
Prostate Cancer 2023
READ OLD THREADS-ask better questions -better understand answers
Be part of your medical team
Document pre-op size-photos and written records
Pre-op VED therapy helps. Post-op is another matter


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