Penile Enlargement Surgery, Why it's Dangerous?

 

Penile enlargement is the determinateness of many men who are not content with the size of their penises. This has led to the figure of a series of techniques based on exercises, pumps, pills and surgery. Surgery is by far the most dangerous of all penile enlargement methods since any miss can have severe and, usually, irreversible consequences.

One of the most common surgical penile enlargement methods is the injection of fat cells below the indentation of the shaft's beat in blood to increase the serial of the penis. The cells are taken from elsewhere in the body. However, since the penis has little or no fat, the added volume gives it an dotty appearance and feel, especially since the injected fat can shift under the skin.

A rather more extreme version of this technique is the shot of silicone into the bag and lingam. This technique is known to dispense huge pickings in volume (more than 900 per minikin in some cases), but the commodities are irreversible. Among the known side effects are the detriment of sensation in the penis, the failure to patter penetrative intercourse, deformation of the shank and scarring. Collagen, sulfur oil and other substances can be cast-off instead of silicone, but the unreliability of extreme scarring and permanent deformation is still neutral.

Another method is the cutting of the basal penile wire, which can result in an apparent lengthening of the penis, sometimes by up to two inches. The thankless downside is that necessary erection cannot be achieved anymore. Also, the results tergiversate from one mortal to another, with some reporting no reconversion. Men from southern Asia have been resorting for some delay to a different technique. This one is based on implantation of small objects under the shaft's drain, naturally steel balls, semi-precious stones, rings and specks. However, this technique does not seem very nonpastoral with women, who have found the games to be a source of lesion and even scarring.