INFORMATION
ON PENIS ENLARGEMENT SURGERY
Penis enlargement surgery (also known as penile augmentation or
penile enhancement surgery) consists of two surgical procedures
to enlarge the penis, one is used to increase the girth of the
penis, the second is used to increase the length of the penis.
Typically, patients opt to have both penis enlargement procedures
carried out at the same time.
Increasing the girth of the penis relies on fat cells (usually
from the patients abdomen) being transplanted (injected) around
the penis. The procedure, known as fat transfer, bulks-up the penis
and can increase the girth of the penis by 1 to 3 inches. One of
the possible drawbacks is that the transplanted fat cells feel
soft, somewhat like female breast tissue. Additionally, increases
in the girth of the penis achieved this way can often disappear
as the fat cells are reabsorbed back into the body. Sometimes,
the re-absorption of the transplanted fat is uneven and the penis
is left looking lumpy and unsightly.
A variant of the fat transfer method called “dermal transfer” may
overcome the fat re-absorption problem. Dermal transfer uses strips
of skin and fat together. The skin stops the fat from being re-absorbed
into the body but because this procedure requires strips of skin
and fat to be grafted onto the penis the surgery is more complex
and the risk of disfigurement is much greater.
Penis lengthening procedures are quite different
from the procedures used to increase the girth of the penis.
The tissue in the penis
that fills with blood is called the corpora cavernosa. This spongy
tissue normally extends from the penis back into the body. In some
cases, half of the corpora cavernosa may be "concealed" inside
the body. Penis lengthening relies on releasing this concealed
tissue which has the effect of increasing the length of the penis.
Releasing the concealed part of the penis is done by cutting the
suspensory ligaments that keep the corpora cavernosa anchored within
the body. This moves the concealed part of the penis forward achieving
additional penis length outside the body. This type of penis enlargement
surgery can result in substantial flaccid size gains but sometimes
only a small increase in the erect penis length.
The side effects of this penis lengthening surgery
stem from the fact that with the suspensory ligament no longer
anchored to the
pubic bone, the penis is effectively “floating loose”.
If the penis is flaccid this will not cause any problems but if
the penis is erect then several problems may occur. Floating loose
from the pubic bone, the erect penis can slip and shift around
during sex. And without the suspensory ligament to hold it, erections
can point downwards. Nowadays, more sophisticated surgical techniques
mean that this can be minimized but the angle of erection is still
likely to be reduced no matter how the surgery is carried out.
Penis enlargement surgery has advanced a long way since the early
days when penile disfigurement was almost a certainty but many
surgeons still refuse to offer penis enlargement procedures because
of the risks associated with it. Candidates for penis enlargement
surgery should seek advice from their own doctor and ideally undergo
counselling before consulting with surgeons offering these procedures.
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