Penile Extenders Actually Might Work, Doctors Say
By Christopher Wanjek,
LiveScience's Bad Medicine Columnist
Doctors confirm the penile extender can increase the flaccid length of a
penis by nearly one inch.
The penile extender, a traction device for the dedicated — to be used at least six
hours a day for at least six months — is not only safe and effective, doctors say, but also can increase erection
size and improve erectile function. The results appear in the March issue
of the journal BJU International.
(For my own sanity, I confirmed that BJU stands for British Journal of Urology, which isn't mentioned at
all within the journal.)
So, is this everything you might be looking for in a penis-stretching device that resembles something out of
a medieval torture chamber? Quite possibly, yes.
The long and short of it
While the topic might sound more like fodder for a pornography magazine than a
urology journal, this research is on the up and up.
Many men long to have something longer, even though few have a penis that is too
small to copulate or pleasure their partner. This anxiety over size is called penile dysmorphophobia, and it is on the rise
worldwide as men turn to pornography and compare notes.
Data is hard to come by, but the general consensus is that the average flaccid
length is about 3 inches, with a range of about 1 to 4 inches, and that the average erect length, regardless of
flaccid size, is between 5 and 6 inches.
The feeling of inadequacy, usually unfounded, has led many men to
consider surgery or crazy-sounding items like the aforementioned penile traction. Surgery is so risky and comes with such high
dissatisfaction rates, however, that most urologists would not consider this an option for anyone with an
erect size of more than 3 inches.
With hopes of finding a safe, non-surgical method to increase the penis length of men with less than 1.5 inches
flaccid or 2.75 inches stretched (a proxy for erect), urologist Paolo Gontero and his colleagues at San Giovanni
Battista Hospital at the University of Turin, Italy, decided to test claims made by one commercial vendor of a
penile extender.
This is science
Gontero's group recruited 15 "highly motivated" men, according to the journal
article, and instructed them to use the penile extender for six months. Per the manufacturer's instructions, the
men gradually increased the traction force during this period from 1.3 pounds to 2.6 pounds.
The gains were greatest in the first months and then leveled off.
All gains remained six months after the contraption was put to rest. The men
gained on average 0.9 inches in flaccid length, a 32 percent gain, and about a half-inch in stretched length to
4.45 inches, which could imply a slightly larger erection.
"The magnitude of gained length was similar irrespective of baseline size,"
Gontero told LiveScience.
"So the device could work also for those men who complain of so-called penile dysmorphopobia [and who] fall within
the normal range — the majority — but who are strongly convinced they have a small penis."
The extender, however, didn't fully live up to the claims of its manufacturer,
andromedical, based in Madrid, which boasts of an average gain of 1.3 inches for an erection and a larger girth.
Gontero's group saw no significant improvement in girth and no biological mechanism that would support the
claim.
Perhaps not surprisingly, the study didn't ask whether the
men's partners were
happy with the change.
A far-stretched idea?
If the thought of stretching a penis for six or more hours a day makes you wince,
you have many urologists on your side. They treat patients who have damaged their penises, sometimes permanently,
from aggressive stretching or vacuum pumps, resulting in burst blood vessels or penile fractures.
Gontero said that gradually stretching the penis can be safe and
could increase its length much like skin tissue is slowly expanded in cosmetic surgery procedures, including certain kinds of breast enhancements.
His follow-up study will investigate correcting the often painful Peyronie's disease, or curved penis, with penile extenders. A small study
published in the Journal of Sexual
Medicine last year found that a commercial penile extender
reduced penile curvature and added a little length.
Gontero warned that one shouldn't sleep wearing a traction device for risk of
damaging the penis while rolling over. (I guess you shouldn't have sex while wearing it, either, but what do I
know?) Gontero also agreed that creams, hormones and other supplements to increase penis size are useless and
potentially dangerous.
After viewing this page most visitors clicked
on:
How to Enlarge Your Penis: Grow It Fast Using Penis
Extenders
Choosing The Right Penis
Extender
Recommended penis
extender
page
source:http://www.livescience.com/health/090311-bad-size.html#comments
|