Nice board S.L.E. glad to be here! I am very interested in PMMA girth thickening, but have concerns because PMMA is not available in the USA, and is not FDA approved. I've read 100's of PMMA patient reports on some of the other forums like phalloboards and pegym, but they all seem to read out of a mechanized trash novel, you know the lines, "I've been here for several months, have read everything, and I'm having PMMA next week." That's great, but the PMMA reports there seem to read very, very similar and seem to be written in a very, very similar way if you catch my drift. They claim to be un-biased, but 99.9% of the reports are of patients going to Dr. Casavantes the dermatologist and getting multiple rounds of PMMA.
On phalloboards they are the harshest critique toward Dr. James Elist, a Beverly Hills Urologist that implants an FDA approved "Permanent Subcutaneous Soft Silicone Implant." I am also considering Elist for my enlargement, as I do not trust phalloboard's super shill tower. What concerns me is the sheer amount of picture documentation of patients that have had complications with the Elist implant, despite the implant's FDA approval. The Elist subcutaneous soft silicone implant does require phalloplasty. Therefore there are scalpels and sutures involved, thus increasing the possible risks and complications. PMMA is an injectable filler and does not require surgery. PMMA may be a safer girth route to take, but if that's true, why isn't PMMA available in the USA for penis enlargement?
On phalloboards they are the harshest critique toward Dr. James Elist, a Beverly Hills Urologist that implants an FDA approved "Permanent Subcutaneous Soft Silicone Implant." I am also considering Elist for my enlargement, as I do not trust phalloboard's super shill tower. What concerns me is the sheer amount of picture documentation of patients that have had complications with the Elist implant, despite the implant's FDA approval. The Elist subcutaneous soft silicone implant does require phalloplasty. Therefore there are scalpels and sutures involved, thus increasing the possible risks and complications. PMMA is an injectable filler and does not require surgery. PMMA may be a safer girth route to take, but if that's true, why isn't PMMA available in the USA for penis enlargement?
Comment