Penile
Revisionary/Reconstructive Surgery
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We are no longer offering surgery or consultations.
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Penile,
scrotal, and abdominal deformities following penile enlargement
(enhancement phalloplasty) surgery can often be corrected
using plastic surgical and penile/genital surgical techniques.
Examples of these deformities are:
- thick
scars,
- wide
scars,
- depressed
hairless scars,
- lower
abdominal cavitation,
- penile
deformity,
- penile
shortening,
- partial
or complete absence of penile shaft (buried penis),
- hair
on the penile shaft,
- abnormally
low hanging penis,
- penile
fat nodules,
- excessive
penile skin at the tip of the shaft,
- scrotum
at the base of the penis (scrotalization).
When previous enhancement phalloplasty surgery has not been
effective/successful, genital reconstructive surgical techniques
can be employed. These may take the form of:
- Scar
revision.
- Penile
lengthening, possibly without an incision on the penis
or abdomen.
- Removal
of injected fat (lipotransfer), dermal strips, dermal
fat grafts and cystic masses.
- Penile
girth enhancement ("widening") with removal of injected
fat (lipotransfer) or dermal strips, dermal fat grafts
and replacement with an Allograft
dermal matrix graft sheet wrapped over the
corpus cavernosa. Allograft
dermal matrix graft strips are not used.
- Recreation
of the penopubic and penoscrotal junctions.
- Contour
correction with insertion of Allograft
dermal matrix graft.
Sometimes, excessive penile skin may have been removed during
circumcision, resulting in a "turkey neck" at the peno-scrotal
junction. A scrotal tissue tuck can easily be performed to
give the appearance of a longer penis.
Most
likely your insurance company will reimburse you for penile
revisionary/reconstructive surgery because the procedure(s)
is not for cosmetic reasons but is for correction
of an abdominal or penile or scrotal abnormality due to
a previous surgical procedure.