ED in rear view mirror - Bionic Transformation - Day 1

The final frontier. Deciding when, if and how.
AnotherOldFart
Posts: 11
Joined: Sat Nov 15, 2025 3:37 pm

ED in rear view mirror - Bionic Transformation - Day 1

Postby AnotherOldFart » Tue Apr 14, 2026 12:20 am

I figured I’d sit down and write out a full, detailed story about my recent penile implant journey because I know there are a lot of guys here who are considering this step or have already gone through it, and sometimes the little details really help.

Back in December 2020, I had a robotic prostatectomy. The surgery itself went well, but like so many men, it left me with erectile dysfunction that just wouldn’t improve no matter what we tried. To be honest, some of the ED problems had already started creeping in even before the prostatectomy, so by the time two full years had passed, the frustration had really built up for both me and my wife. Intimacy had become almost nonexistent, and it was weighing on us emotionally. After many long conversations, we finally agreed it was time to look into a penile implant as a permanent solution.

That’s when we found Dr. Miguel Simpson here. From the very first appointment, we felt confident. He was patient, thorough, and answered every single question we had without rushing us. After interviewing two different surgeons, we both knew without any doubt that he was the right choice.

The big day finally came on March 27, 2026. I checked into the hospital, and at 11:00 AM sharp I was wheeled into the operating room. The whole procedure for the implant took only about 45 minutes through an infrapubic incision. Everything went exactly as planned. I stayed overnight so they could keep an eye on me and remove the drain tube the next morning. By noon on March 28th I was already discharged and walking through my own front door by 12:30 PM. It felt almost surreal how smoothly it all went.

The preparation Dr. Simpson gave us before surgery made a huge difference. He provided a very detailed packet with both pre-op and post-op instructions that covered everything. My wife and I took it seriously. We went out and bought four big bags of frozen peas, and she had some fun with it — she made bright “Ice, Ice Baby” Post-it notes and stuck them on the TV and microwave so I wouldn’t forget. For the first three days, every time I was awake I stuck to the schedule religiously: 20 minutes icing the incision and penis, 20 minutes off, then repeat. I also forced myself to do lots of slow, gentle walking around the house even when I didn’t feel like it, because I knew movement helps with swelling and recovery.

Since I donated a kidney to an acquaintance 16 years ago, I’m always cautious with anti-inflammatories. I mostly used acetaminophen and only took ibuprofen when absolutely necessary, alternating the two. The amazing part? My pain never went higher than a 2 out of 10 the entire time. I had very minimal bruising and almost no swelling, which I was really grateful for. The only time I needed anything stronger was two Hydrocodone tablets before bed on the second and third nights. After that, regular Tylenol was enough.

Today, April 14th, I went in for my first post-op visit. Dr. Simpson was very pleased. He said the incision is healing beautifully and the pump is sitting in an ideal position in the scrotum. Right now it’s being kept at 50% inflated. I go back on April 20th to have it deflated and to start learning how to cycle it properly. I’m excited but also a little nervous about that next step.

At olg age, I still consider myself pretty lucky. I stay active, walk every day, eat well, and try to keep in decent physical shape. This whole experience has me feeling optimistic about the future. It’s been a long road from the prostatectomy to this point, but I truly believe this implant is going to open up a new chapter for my wife and me.

I also want to say how grateful I am for this forum. Reading everyone’s honest stories, questions, and updates over the past several months has been incredibly helpful and reassuring. And none of this would have been possible without my amazing wife, who has been my rock through every appointment, every worry, and every bag of frozen peas. She’s been supportive from day one, never complaining, always encouraging.

We interviewed two surgeons before deciding, and I can say with complete confidence that choosing Dr. Miguel Simpson was the best decision we could have made. His skill, his team, and the care we received have been outstanding.

I’ll keep posting updates as I start cycling the implant and as we slowly get back to normal life. If any of you guys (especially the older guys or those who had prostatectomy first) have questions or want details about any part of the process, feel free to ask. I’m happy to share whatever I can.

Thanks for reading my long story, brothers. Wishing all of you the best on your own journeys.

cbinspok
Posts: 1038
Joined: Wed Feb 03, 2021 7:45 pm

Re: ED in rear view mirror - Bionic Transformation - Day 1

Postby cbinspok » Tue Apr 14, 2026 8:06 am

AOF we're here, we've been there. rest, ice, each day will be better than the last.
71 years now,Ed twenty years. A sever break to penis, vit E, pataba, Viagra, massage Ved cilas, exhausted, I tossed in my towel, Op for implant Mar 18, 2021 AMS LGX 18 x12 + 1 3cm RTE,yep standard size, happily gained girth and length,.. stay hwp!

1sfman
Posts: 66
Joined: Sun Sep 28, 2025 9:12 am
Location: Central Illinois

Re: ED in rear view mirror - Bionic Transformation - Day 1

Postby 1sfman » Tue Apr 14, 2026 9:33 am

You got it right; rest and ice. I'm 12 weeks out and every day is better than the previous. My only regret is I waited way too long to get the implant (nearly 4 years in my case).

Welcome to the Bionic brotherhood.
75 YO (1951). Happily married since 1972 (A couple since 1968). ED since age 60. Viagra, then Cialis, Trimix/Quadmix and VED. AMS 700 21cm + 1cm RTE left side, MS pump & 100cc reservoir. Implanted using Infrapubic procedure Jan 21, 2026.

Old Guy
Posts: 3129
Joined: Tue Mar 31, 2020 4:31 pm
Location: Ohio

Re: ED in rear view mirror - Bionic Transformation - Day 1

Postby Old Guy » Tue Apr 14, 2026 10:32 am

Congrats. Sounds like you had a good experience. Nice that you were given pre and post op instructions.
Nov. 8, 2019
6+ years, Coloplast Titan OTR
Married 38 years to my beautiful young bride
Always here to answer questions if you PM me

User avatar
ElbowRoom
Posts: 1001
Joined: Mon Mar 17, 2025 1:58 pm

Re: ED in rear view mirror - Bionic Transformation - Day 1

Postby ElbowRoom » Tue Apr 14, 2026 1:14 pm

Glad things are going well, AOF. What type and size implant did you receive? What city was your surgery performed in?
59yo Coloplast Titan 28cm Penoscrotal with Dr. Hakky 10/21/2025.
Pre-op erect measurements:
8.5"L and 6.5"C

Post-op: 8”L and 6”C at one week.
8.5” and 6”C at three weeks with full glans engorgement

LetoMan
Posts: 441
Joined: Tue Apr 09, 2024 1:25 pm

Re: ED in rear view mirror - Bionic Transformation - Day 1

Postby LetoMan » Tue Apr 14, 2026 2:34 pm

Congrats and welcome to the brotherhood!
Born 1974. Implanted 5/21/2024. AMS 700 CX 21cm, 3cm RTE. Penoscrotal. Venous leak my whole life. Pills helped, but hated the side effects; worked less as I aged. Skipped injections. Grateful to bionic brotherhood that helped me make this decision.

HikerMan
Posts: 389
Joined: Sun Aug 14, 2022 9:33 am

Re: ED in rear view mirror - Bionic Transformation - Day 1

Postby HikerMan » Tue Apr 14, 2026 8:50 pm

AnotherOldFart wrote:I figured I’d sit down and write out a full, detailed story about my recent penile implant journey because I know there are a lot of guys here who are considering this step or have already gone through it, and sometimes the little details really help.

Back in December 2020, I had a robotic prostatectomy. The surgery itself went well, but like so many men, it left me with erectile dysfunction that just wouldn’t improve no matter what we tried. To be honest, some of the ED problems had already started creeping in even before the prostatectomy, so by the time two full years had passed, the frustration had really built up for both me and my wife. Intimacy had become almost nonexistent, and it was weighing on us emotionally. After many long conversations, we finally agreed it was time to look into a penile implant as a permanent solution.

That’s when we found Dr. Miguel Simpson here. From the very first appointment, we felt confident. He was patient, thorough, and answered every single question we had without rushing us. After interviewing two different surgeons, we both knew without any doubt that he was the right choice.

The big day finally came on March 27, 2026. I checked into the hospital, and at 11:00 AM sharp I was wheeled into the operating room. The whole procedure for the implant took only about 45 minutes through an infrapubic incision. Everything went exactly as planned. I stayed overnight so they could keep an eye on me and remove the drain tube the next morning. By noon on March 28th I was already discharged and walking through my own front door by 12:30 PM. It felt almost surreal how smoothly it all went.

The preparation Dr. Simpson gave us before surgery made a huge difference. He provided a very detailed packet with both pre-op and post-op instructions that covered everything. My wife and I took it seriously. We went out and bought four big bags of frozen peas, and she had some fun with it — she made bright “Ice, Ice Baby” Post-it notes and stuck them on the TV and microwave so I wouldn’t forget. For the first three days, every time I was awake I stuck to the schedule religiously: 20 minutes icing the incision and penis, 20 minutes off, then repeat. I also forced myself to do lots of slow, gentle walking around the house even when I didn’t feel like it, because I knew movement helps with swelling and recovery.

Since I donated a kidney to an acquaintance 16 years ago, I’m always cautious with anti-inflammatories. I mostly used acetaminophen and only took ibuprofen when absolutely necessary, alternating the two. The amazing part? My pain never went higher than a 2 out of 10 the entire time. I had very minimal bruising and almost no swelling, which I was really grateful for. The only time I needed anything stronger was two Hydrocodone tablets before bed on the second and third nights. After that, regular Tylenol was enough.

Today, April 14th, I went in for my first post-op visit. Dr. Simpson was very pleased. He said the incision is healing beautifully and the pump is sitting in an ideal position in the scrotum. Right now it’s being kept at 50% inflated. I go back on April 20th to have it deflated and to start learning how to cycle it properly. I’m excited but also a little nervous about that next step.

At olg age, I still consider myself pretty lucky. I stay active, walk every day, eat well, and try to keep in decent physical shape. This whole experience has me feeling optimistic about the future. It’s been a long road from the prostatectomy to this point, but I truly believe this implant is going to open up a new chapter for my wife and me.

I also want to say how grateful I am for this forum. Reading everyone’s honest stories, questions, and updates over the past several months has been incredibly helpful and reassuring. And none of this would have been possible without my amazing wife, who has been my rock through every appointment, every worry, and every bag of frozen peas. She’s been supportive from day one, never complaining, always encouraging.

We interviewed two surgeons before deciding, and I can say with complete confidence that choosing Dr. Miguel Simpson was the best decision we could have made. His skill, his team, and the care we received have been outstanding.

I’ll keep posting updates as I start cycling the implant and as we slowly get back to normal life. If any of you guys (especially the older guys or those who had prostatectomy first) have questions or want details about any part of the process, feel free to ask. I’m happy to share whatever I can.

Thanks for reading my long story, brothers. Wishing all of you the best on your own journeys.


Congratulations, brother.

So good to have you with us.

Like you, I have a supportive wife.....I couldn't ask for any thing better.

Your marriage is going to be a very happy one in a couple of months

You'll see! :D
AMS 700 installed 12/22/22
REAR TIP Extender 5.0CM MR Conditional
AMS 700 SPHERICAL RESERVOIR 100 ML.
AMS 700 LGX INFRA PUBIC 18 cm
Dr. Jeffrey Loh Doyle- USC KECK
Prostate cancer survivor- RP performed 8/20
56, Marathon runner, John Muir Trail fanatic.

AnotherOldFart
Posts: 11
Joined: Sat Nov 15, 2025 3:37 pm

Re: ED in rear view mirror - Bionic Transformation - Day 1

Postby AnotherOldFart » Wed Apr 15, 2026 1:55 am

Thank you bionic brothers.

Icing and resting a lot. Grateful to my bionic brotherhood. More details later from my discharge papers.

AnotherOldFart
Posts: 11
Joined: Sat Nov 15, 2025 3:37 pm

Re: ED in rear view mirror - Bionic Transformation - Day 1

Postby AnotherOldFart » Wed Apr 15, 2026 5:22 am

80yearsyoung wrote:
cbinspok wrote:AOF we're here, we've been there. rest, ice, each day will be better than the last.


Very generic :lol: :lol: either say something helpful or shut up.

His wife left him ice notes on the fridge :lol: :lol: and he has been icing "religiously" :lol: so no need to be redundant...can't hold the urge to reiterate cult mantras ? :lol: :lol: obviously he isn't waiting for your farty advice :lol:

Anyways

Op,
Why are boomers obsessed with icing ? Why is it a topic ?
And tylenol and all that shit ?


Your comments are making me physically sick. Can you please stop inducing such intense panic and fear? As a prostate cancer survivor, the absolute last thing I need is to be worrying about my medical device failing. We have Medicare in our great country, and I have made a conscious decision not to obsess over potential complications. Right now, all I want is to focus on icing, resting, and finally managing the side effects of these pain meds. Thank goodness for stool softeners.

Alright, back to icing and Netflix.

User avatar
SWorks17
Posts: 1217
Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2022 4:33 pm
Location: Garden Ridge, Texas

Re: ED in rear view mirror - Bionic Transformation - Day 1

Postby SWorks17 » Wed Apr 15, 2026 8:55 am

Congratulations AOF!

Welcome to the Bionic Brotherhood!

Heal up, so you can use your New Bionic Weapon!

Your Bionic Brother in Texas
SWorks
Age 68, Garden Ridge Texas, Boston Scientific Rezum procedure for benign enlarged prostate 19 May 21, AMS LGX 18cm with 3cm RT's installed 5 Nov 2021 by Major Dr Shane Barney, BAMC, San Antonio, Texas, Married 37 years.
DOD Pg 131, Faces Pg 27


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