wolfpacker wrote:I'm not using them yet because the pills still somewhat work for me. Search "pge1 enlargement". As soon as the pills quit working, I cannot wait to get on caverject/pge1 and gain size.
Is your ED caused by a venous leak?
wolfpacker wrote:I'm not using them yet because the pills still somewhat work for me. Search "pge1 enlargement". As soon as the pills quit working, I cannot wait to get on caverject/pge1 and gain size.
Seeking wrote:This is my first post on this forum - let's hope it's a useful one.
I'm 28, had ED for four years, symptoms mirror those of venous leak exactly (and low and behold, this was diagnosed a week ago).
I've been for a consultation + ultrasound doppler at London Andrology and am in the final stages of booking this procedure at their Austrian clinic. My doppler showed that although arterial inflow was very good, my venous outflow was significant and this is evidently the organic cause of my ED.
Some people have quite rightly asked why this isn't available on the NHS or used by any other large public health body and there's a simple answer to that: economics. A treatment will ONLY be implemented on a grand scale if its efficacy is reliably and consistently demonstrated over a significant period AND it is cost-effective. These two factors are inseparable. This doesn't mean treatments outside the scope of public health aren't worth trying - it simply means that by trying these treatments and stepping out to the frontier of medicine you are exposing yourself to more downside risk (usually monetary) but also possibly a better treatment outcome (you hope). In the British press there are stories on a monthly basis re: new drug treatments that haven't been taken up by the NHS due to cost, but that are demonstrably more effective than the treatments currently available; thus, it isn't always a matter of lack of efficacy. That being said, why MORE research hasn't been done into sclerotherapy is strange, but far FAR stranger things have happened.
The use of Sclerotherapy in a non-research setting to treat ED is both novel and extremely expensive (for what is basically a glorified injection + X-ray) and I'm informed its efficacy depends entirely on which veins in your penis are the leaky ones - it's therefore too much of a gamble to be used in public health. If the veins closed off by the procedure (which I'm also told aren't case dependent - its the same ones each time) are the ones causing your venous leak, then prepare to be thrilled by the results. If those veins they close off weren't even pathological in the first place, you've just set fire to £3500 and your journey through the ninth circle of hell continues (but at least no further damage has been done).
I'm more than happy to fork out for this procedure as I'm close to the end game with my ED now. Before getting an implant and getting my entire member hollowed out, I want to be sure EVERYTHING possible has been ticked off the list. If this sclerotherapy procedure doesn't work, I'll become a pill popper until their efficacy tails off, then it's probably onto the operating table unless something completely unforeseen in the world of ED research trials comes up.
I'll obviously be keeping all of you in the loop on this and let you know how my experience goes. I'm not hopeful at all that it will work, but that's purely a psychological protection mechanism - a GP that I respect hugely and that is extremely knowledgeable told me that, if I'm sure money isn't an issue, this is absolutely worth trying.
Feel free to fire any questions my way.
Peace.
Seeking wrote:I can understand any point made about whether this is a really someone from London Andrology pushing for sales etc. but all I can really do is just report honestly my experience and people can take it or leave it. It's a valid point though - this industry is rammed solid full of spammy nonsense so its hard to separate the useful from just the 'noise'. I'm really glad this topic has received some interest though - ill absolutely be providing all the info needed right here.
Re: the question about my venous leak, I see that as just a physical classification really...I don't see a reason why - as a result of vein damage or some other event - you can't develop leaky veins at any point in your life. It's true though that alot of venous leak cases are congenital, but this is a poorly understood area in general so yeah.
Seeking wrote:Absolutely no later than end of September 2015. I'm shooting for a mid-August or mid-September appointment.
Seeking wrote:Absolutely no later than end of September 2015. I'm shooting for a mid-August or mid-September appointment.
gollam121 wrote:Hi Seeking,
Its been sometime since I have been active on this thread however I had a chasing email from the London Androlgy Center yesterday asking if I was going ahead with my surgery in Austria. I have been hesitant to move forward primarily based on the cost outlay and I guess the potential disappointing outcome.
Your reasoning's from your own experience make a lot of sense in terms of the last viable stop before the final solution which is the implant! As to why this is the only clinic offering this treatment I had very much the same questions as others on this thread but when I think hard about it I've had 23 years of different Urologists (NHS & private) contradicting each others practise with one prominent prof telling me he wasn't sure a venous leak actually existed!
If you are ready to undertake this costly but routine surgery I would really appreciate your feedback because if it all goes well and I pray it does for you I think I will go for it myself by year end.
Good luck.
Gollam.
P.s. I'd be happy to stay on PD5 drugs for the rest of my natural life if this surgery supported their total effect 100% of the time / every time!Seeking wrote:Absolutely no later than end of September 2015. I'm shooting for a mid-August or mid-September appointment.
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