
Penis enlargement surgery is a relatively simple, safe operation
performed on an outpatient basis.
Surgery actually involved two separate procedures. Both are completely natural and do not
involve the introduction of implants or other foreign materials.
The first, a lengthening procedure, was originally developed more than 20 years ago
to treat boys suffering from microphallus, an abnormally small penis. The other proceedure
is a fat transplant process adapted and perfected by Cosmetic Surgery International from traditional
facial plastic surgery techniques.
In the lengthening procedure, the doctor releases the suspensory ligament that connects
the penis to the pubic bone, which allows access to the section of the penis hidden behind
the skin wall. He is then able to extend the length of the penis in proportion to the length
of the organ's internal section.
Once the additional erectile tissue is exposed, the ligament is reattached to prevent retraction.
A flap of skin from in front of the pubic bone is brought down to cover the newly-exposed section.
The increase in length varies depending on a patient's anatomy. However, results generally range
from 1" to more than 2
1/2". The average additional length is 1 1/2" to 2". The limiting factor is
the length of a patient's suspensory legament. There is no way to predict what the length will be
prior to surgery.
The enlargement procedure involves a simple transfer of fat cells from the patient's lower abdomen
into the tissue region between the skin and the erectile tissue of the penis. A patient's own fat
cells are used for augmentation because they do not run the risk of rejection by the body.
The result is a penis of the same shape and length but greater in circumference. Because the penile
shaft is narrower than the maximum diameter of the head, the doctor usually fills out the shaft
slightly beyond the head's maximum diameter to maintain proper proportion.
Circumference can be increased by 30-50 percent, depending on the results desired by the patient.
In each procedure, increases occur in both the flacid and erect state, although length gain in the
flacid state is generally greater.
Lengthening and augmentation procedures take approximately 25 minutes each; surgery involving both
procedures usually runs no more than 55 minutes.
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