What are the Risks, results and costs?
For most men, the thought of any of these procedures is too difficult to contemplate. But for others, the desire to change their manhood for the bigger and better is still overwhelming. Current estimates show that to date about 18,000 men have had the surgery. Yet the surgery is still considered somewhat risky and only a relative few surgeons will perform it — right now, only about 30 in the U.S. — and then most will do it only if the patient is mature, emotionally stable and has submitted to counseling prior to the surgery. Outcomes of early penis enlargement surgeries were often disastrous: many men were rendered impotent or disfigured, coming from surgery with freakishly shaped, red, raw, or in the worst cases, terminally limp penises. Todays surgeons have more knowledge and experience in performing these procedures, though critics still question the reliability and safety of the operation. The ligament-cutting method may create a gain of an inch or two in length, at the risk of t
For most men, the thought of any of these procedures is too hard to contemplate. But for others, the desire to change their manhood for the bigger and better is still overwhelming. Current estimates show that to date about 18,000 men have had the surgery. Yet the surgery is still considered somewhat risky and only a relative few surgeons will perform it — right now, only about 30 in the U.S. — and then most will do it only if the patient is mature, emotionally stable and has submitted to counseling prior to the surgery. Outcomes of early penis enlargement surgeries were often disastrous: many men were rendered impotent or disfigured, coming from surgery with freakishly shaped, red, raw, or in the worst cases, terminally limp penises. Today’s surgeons have more knowledge and experience in performing these procedures, though critics still question the reliability and safety of the operation. The ligament-cutting method may create a gain of an inch or two in length, at the risk of total
For most men, the thought of any of these procedures is too difficult to contemplate. But for others, the desire to change their manhood for the bigger and better is still overwhelming. Current estimates show that to date about 18,000 men have had the surgery. Yet the surgery is still considered somewhat risky and only a relative few surgeons will perform it — right now, only about 30 in the U.S. — and then most will do it only if the patient is mature, emotionally stable and has submitted to counseling prior to the surgery. Outcomes of early penis enlargement surgeries were often disastrous: many men were rendered impotent or disfigured, coming from surgery with freakishly shaped, red, raw, or in the worst cases, terminally limp penises. Today’s surgeons have more knowledge and experience in performing these procedures, though critics still question the reliability and safety of the operation. The ligament-cutting method may create a gain of an inch or two in length, at the risk of to