Is this doctor good enough for implant surgery?

The final frontier. Deciding when, if and how.
LetoMan
Posts: 266
Joined: Tue Apr 09, 2024 1:25 pm

Re: Is this doctor good enough for implant surgery?

Postby LetoMan » Fri Oct 31, 2025 10:54 pm

macoza wrote:Can you clarify what you mean? I really dont understand what youre trying to say.

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Doctors who perform only a few implants per year have a greater risk of infection and need for revision. Once they perform about 25 or so per year, that increased risk goes away. There does not appear to be decreased risk because a doctor performs more than that, even many, many, many more.
50. Implanted 5/21/2024 at Kaiser SSF. 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.

macoza
Posts: 253
Joined: Sat Oct 15, 2022 7:45 pm

Re: Is this doctor good enough for implant surgery?

Postby macoza » Sat Nov 01, 2025 10:53 am

LetoMan wrote:
macoza wrote:Can you clarify what you mean? I really dont understand what youre trying to say.

.


Doctors who perform only a few implants per year have a greater risk of infection and need for revision. Once they perform about 25 or so per year, that increased risk goes away. There does not appear to be decreased risk because a doctor performs more than that, even many, many, many more.

So when an implanter does more than 25 surgeries a year the increase in risk of infection is eliminated. But the risk of infection never is eliminated no matter how many surgeries you perform after that.

Good to know this. My doc told me he's done 50 - 60 a year and has been doing this for 8 years. But he also does other types of surgeries also.

.

macoza
Posts: 253
Joined: Sat Oct 15, 2022 7:45 pm

Re: Is this doctor good enough for implant surgery?

Postby macoza » Sat Nov 01, 2025 10:57 am

lasthope2.0 wrote:Hey Macoza, just FYI..... Dr. Leon Telis is a Coloplast Titan COE. He is not a COE for AMS 700. Just a FYI, when you have your brand selection conversations with him.


He told me he does both devices. Does it really matter if he does more coloplast than AMS? He told me his patients have had great results and I haven't found negative reviews on his surgeries when researching him.

Let me know your thoughts.

.

lasthope2.0
Posts: 34
Joined: Sat Oct 11, 2025 1:23 pm

Re: Is this doctor good enough for implant surgery?

Postby lasthope2.0 » Sat Nov 01, 2025 12:01 pm

macoza wrote:
lasthope2.0 wrote:Hey Macoza, just FYI..... Dr. Leon Telis is a Coloplast Titan COE. He is not a COE for AMS 700. Just a FYI, when you have your brand selection conversations with him.


He told me he does both devices. Does it really matter if he does more coloplast than AMS? He told me his patients have had great results and I haven't found negative reviews on his surgeries when researching him.

Let me know your thoughts.

.


If he routinely uses both, I wouldn’t worry. He’ll recommend what best fits your anatomy and goals. It is just for your research. Some surgeons favor one over the other, often because of their or their hospital’s contracts and it can reflect their COE status.
40, 2024 - Coloplast Genesis malleable 22cm-13mm with 1cm RTE - Subcoronal - Distal edema - Significant loss in sensitivity - Happy otherwise - Considering an inflatable

macoza
Posts: 253
Joined: Sat Oct 15, 2022 7:45 pm

Re: Is this doctor good enough for implant surgery?

Postby macoza » Sat Nov 01, 2025 1:38 pm

lasthope2.0 wrote:If he routinely uses both, I wouldn’t worry. He’ll recommend what best fits your anatomy and goals.


He actually asked me which device I prefer. I told him I prefer AMS cuz of the length but to be honest I really dont know which to get. Maybe you can help me decide?

Some surgeons favor one over the other, often because of their or their hospital’s contracts and it can reflect their COE status.


Would that be a problem? Does that mean that favoritism towards a device can be at the detriment to the patient?

Btw, I created a thread on my insurance covering the cost of the implant. Please take a look and I look forward to your replies on it. Thanks!!
viewtopic.php?f=6&t=27400

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Last edited by macoza on Sat Nov 01, 2025 5:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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ElbowRoom
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Re: Is this doctor good enough for implant surgery?

Postby ElbowRoom » Sat Nov 01, 2025 3:05 pm

macoza wrote:He actually asked me which device I prefer. I told him In prefer AMS cuz of the length but to be honest I really dont know which to get. Maybe you can help me decide?


I assume you’re talking about the LGX from AMS, for the length expansion. Honestly, from my research and talking to implant surgeons, it seems like the length expansion feature is more marketing than game-changing feature. Yes, it expands lengthwise, but how much is limited by your anatomy. You’re not going to start with a 6” dick and end with 7”. You might see an extra 1/4” over a properly-sized CX or Titan.

But that comes at a price…the LGX has the poorest axial rigidity of all major implants. It can bend more easily even at full inflation than a CX or Titan. That can make a big difference when getting aggressive during sex. One surgeon went so far as to say to me he’d never install an LGX in even an average sized penis, because the longer it is the worse the rigidity problem becomes (long lever and all that). He said the LGX is only really suitable for short penises to try to eke out every last mm of size.
58yo 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.

lasthope2.0
Posts: 34
Joined: Sat Oct 11, 2025 1:23 pm

Re: Is this doctor good enough for implant surgery?

Postby lasthope2.0 » Sat Nov 01, 2025 4:06 pm

macoza wrote:
lasthope2.0 wrote:If he routinely uses both, I wouldn’t worry. He’ll recommend what best fits your anatomy and goals.


He actually asked me which device I prefer. I told him In prefer AMS cuz of the length but to be honest I really dont know which to get. Maybe you can help me decide?

Some surgeons favor one over the other, often because of their or their hospital’s contracts and it can reflect their COE status.


Would that be a problem? Does that mean that favoritism towards a device can be at the detriment to the patient?

Btw, I created a thread on my insurance covering the cost of the implant. Please take a look and I look forward to your replies on it. Thanks!!
viewtopic.php?f=6&t=27400

..



Will do. I posted videos by Dr. Hakky and Dr. Clavell about AMS and Coloplast products in your other thread. Both are good and they have their differences.

Favoritism can be positive, it can signal expertise, device familiarity, research experience, nuanced surgical experience including complex re-dos for specific brands.
40, 2024 - Coloplast Genesis malleable 22cm-13mm with 1cm RTE - Subcoronal - Distal edema - Significant loss in sensitivity - Happy otherwise - Considering an inflatable

LGXDownunder
Posts: 452
Joined: Fri Mar 07, 2025 7:59 am
Location: Sydney, Australia

Re: Is this doctor good enough for implant surgery?

Postby LGXDownunder » Sat Nov 01, 2025 10:07 pm

ElbowRoom wrote:
macoza wrote:He actually asked me which device I prefer. I told him In prefer AMS cuz of the length but to be honest I really dont know which to get. Maybe you can help me decide?


I assume you’re talking about the LGX from AMS, for the length expansion. Honestly, from my research and talking to implant surgeons, it seems like the length expansion feature is more marketing than game-changing feature. Yes, it expands lengthwise, but how much is limited by your anatomy. You’re not going to start with a 6” dick and end with 7”. You might see an extra 1/4” over a properly-sized CX or Titan.

But that comes at a price…the LGX has the poorest axial rigidity of all major implants. It can bend more easily even at full inflation than a CX or Titan. That can make a big difference when getting aggressive during sex. One surgeon went so far as to say to me he’d never install an LGX in even an average sized penis, because the longer it is the worse the rigidity problem becomes (long lever and all that). He said the LGX is only really suitable for short penises to try to eke out every last mm of size.

Much of that makes sense but is very different from my own experience to date. The LGX seems to be something of a workhorse for those of us with average sized dicks, especially those who have suffered some level of atrophy after PC/prostatectomy and consequent ED. I had a bit over 6 inches originally, as best as I can recall, and definitely lost some size after my RP. I addressed that to a degree with aggressive VED use.

Post implant I'm well above 6 inches after many months of cycling. Substantially bigger flaccid than I've ever been in my life. My aim was to get back my original size back. I seem to have done that, maybe very slightly more, and I knew that you can't expect more than that. I have the longest LGX cylinders at 21cm, albeit without any RTEs. Fully pumped it stands erect like an impenetrable Rock of Gibraltar. I cannot imagine anyone possibly wanting it harder.

Both my wife and I prefer aggressive PIV sex, and I thrust very hard and balls deep for extended periods. I've never had any issues with axial rigidity as some guys report. It literally does not move, and in fact I often deliberately change the angle rapidly while thrusting, because my wife gets off on it. Sometimes it actually becomes uncomfortably hard for me after a while, so I deflate then re-inflate to a lesser pressure. Maybe mine is somehow anchored better, or the lack of RTEs makes a difference, I don't know. I'm definitely happy with the functional results of the LGX.
71, married, Sydney Oz. PC & nerve sparing RRP Mar 22, profound ED since. Tried pills, Trimix inj, focal shockwave, VED.
Finally implanted Mar 6 2025 AMS 700 LGX 21cm x 12mm, no RTEs, MS pump, Penoscrotal.
Recovery great so far but have a bend.

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ElbowRoom
Posts: 582
Joined: Mon Mar 17, 2025 1:58 pm

Re: Is this doctor good enough for implant surgery?

Postby ElbowRoom » Sat Nov 01, 2025 11:22 pm

Downunder…

I’m just a layman going off my own research and what I’ve been told by others, so I could be off on any or all of what I said. The rigidity may just be a matter of a broomstick vs. an iron rod. :lol: I know my Titan fully inflated is ridiculously hard, to the point that if seems it would be uncomfortable to both partners, and if an LGX is even 80% of that it’s more than adequate for any human endeavors. :D

I do think the lengthwise expansion is kind of marketing though…if it was really stretching the length out significantly it would be causing erosion issues. Now it certainly might help create a more natural flaccid by being undersized when deflated and then expanding to fill the tunica when inflated.

Again, I’m not an expert and likely talking out of my ass.
58yo 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.

prguy3
Posts: 31
Joined: Mon Feb 17, 2025 6:59 pm

Re: Is this doctor good enough for implant surgery?

Postby prguy3 » Sun Nov 02, 2025 12:07 am

Asdefxx wrote:
lasthope2.0 wrote:I would also contact the insurance company to check if these CPT codes are covered by your plan.

54405 (inflatable)
54400 (semirigid)
(CPT - Current Procedural Terminology)


Whelp, it's done. Both CPTs are NOT covered under my plan. Hooray. Better start preparing myself psychologically to drop $20k on this.

She said "the doctor can submit a predetermination request for further review" but I have no idea the success rate on that.


That sucks... IF going out of pocket, definitely make sure you get a high volume surgeon.
41 yo ED for several years. Coloplast 22 (trimmed 0.5cm), no RTE. Classic on 5/28/25. Dr. Clavell.


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