emenac3645 wrote:it is so with mine but mine lasts between four to six hours. I avoid sex now due to it. thank a lot I will speak to my Gasto.
Thanks
As I said my local Uro's for some reason were less than helpful. The gastro was a check to be sure there was not a problem with my colan/rectum but also to get a view (imaging) of the proximal (RTE) end of my cylinders. The gastro report of the CT scan did not note a problem with the implant. I did get a copy of the scan from the image facility. Just call the place that did what ever type of scan you have. I went down to pick it up and it was on a DVD or CD. I then used my computer to open the files. Took some time to figure out how to view the images but was able to then did a screen capture of the image showing the trouble with the implant. I then printed it off and took it to see my Uro. It then took some time to be sent out to another uro. When I went to see this other Uro I first saw his PA or resident. This guy must have been really new and was somewhat nervous. But I helped him a bit and he went and talked to the doctor. When they came back it was clear the doctor knew what was going on but the PA/resident seemed still troubled a bit. The doctor used me as a training experience. He had me lay back with my pants still down and draw my feet up toward my body and my knees out to the sides to expose the underside of my scrotum down to my anus. I had done this my self and traced the cylinders down to my rectum area. The the doctor then did this and then had the other guy do this also while the surgeon told him where to feel and asking him if he felt the problem. The cylinders are in the corpora side by side in the penis. When they enter the body they fork to either side. This is called the Crus. Perforation can happen during implant. It can also happen afterwards. This can happen proximal (inside your body) and distal (in the penis up to the Glans (head of the penis). In some cases this results in cross over. That is where one cylinder crosses over through the perforation into the other corporal body. The Crus can also rip loose. That can be reattached. Many times with a proximal perforation the cylinder cannot be reinserted inside the end of the Crus and the surgeon makes a sling to hold the RTE end of the cylinder in place and give it support. Either way this may or may not be fixed without replacing the implant. I am waiting to hear back from 2 doctors and one wants to do just the repair and not replace my implant. The other wants to replace everything.
This may or my not be what you have. I posted this so you could do a self examination or in case your Uro already did this examination to check for this. Or as a way to get an image of the proximal cylinders to confirm or eliminate this as a cause. As I said this is a problem with implant surgery and there are papers and video's on this problem with special instructions (training) for surgeons to avoid this. I did a self examination and had an idea this was my problem that caused others. My penis angle to one side from the base as one cylinder was supported and the other was not. During sex with a partner I would have pain afterwards from an aggressive hand job and or penetrative sex. Not all the time. A year ago I had 2 lady friends and had to stop seeing them both as like you I was concerned that sex with them might cause maybe a another perforation that would lead to infection and removal of my implant.
Good luck with this and let us know how this works out. Send me a PM and I'll get you my phone number if you want to talk.