Originally Posted by marinera
Really? Let’s see. The study from Roos cited here
rootsnatty - Gaining at Higher Anglesis the same on which the analysis linked here
marinera - Gaining at Higher Angles
is based on, and it clearly states that there is no increase in erect length severing the ligs.
The study you link here
rootsnatty - Gaining at Higher Angles
tells us:
“The penile length was calculated from the base of the penis to the tip of the glans while in a stretched condition according to the technique proposed by Levine and Larsen”.
And I want just to remember you that that paper is pretty much just marketing. The sole remaining cited by you doesn’t tell anywhere how length increase was measured and it too can’t be considered without conflict of interestes. None of them refers to increase in erect length that I can see; and, I don’t want to sound condescending, but ‘a case report’ can’t be considered evidence of any kind in this field, it is like saying ‘Guess what I heard happened?’
The sole increase you can have is that caused by the slight change in erection angle, because when pointing down the penis is a bit longer. But at the same angle, the penis has the same length, ligs or not.
That is consistent with the function of the ligs, which is not to tie the penis to the body, but to hold the penis in place. Actually without the ligs holding it in place you could have the penis retracting inside your body when having intercourses, or as said falling down into the scrotum.
The Roos study:
In that article you posted this is the part actually taken from the Roos study:
“Penile elongation was performed in more than 260 cases in less than one year by Drs. Roos and Lissoos in South Africa. The surgical procedure includes an extensive dissection of the suspensory ligament by the urologist while the plastic surgeon designs a skin flap. They believe that “the suspensory ligament of the penis is of the utmost importance in penis lengthening surgery” (Roos & Lissoos, 1994)”
This part is a statement by the author that comes in the next paragraph after he references another study on surgical technique:
“Severing of the suspensory ligament enables the penis to extend closer to its erect length while flaccid.”
This second point is not referenced and is the author’s opinion only. It is NOT pulled from the Roos study.
The Roos study used BPFSL.
In that first artile I referenced, Klein notes an increase of .75 cm in erect length, the rest are BPFSL measurements.
The other study you reference in this post is the third study I posted where I indicated I knew it was conducted by plastic surgeons in the same post. I know this brings its validity into question, but I included it because they did not make ridiculous claims and were honest about satisfaction and complications, as I stated when I initially posted it.
Originally Posted by marinera
I never said it was ‘a clinical study’, and I find interesting your conviction that review of the literature is meaningless while a ‘clinical study’ is inherently the truth. A ‘clinical study’ can tell you something absurd if the methodology is fucked up. And if the guy who perfom the surgeries is the same doing ‘the clinical study’, the are not reliable at all. That’s what reviews of the literature serves
I’m sorry, you said “The controlled penis lengthening studies I posted…” My point in saying how they were not “controlled clinical studies” was is reference to this. Neither of them was controlled as neither had a control group or even an experiment, I was showing that, I should have left out the word “clinical.”
I definitely was not saying literature reviews are meaningless, just that the papers you posted were literature reviews or questionnaires and not “controlled penis lengthening studies.” Two of the papers I posted were literature reviews, and it would be very difficult to perform a clinical study on this subject as you would have to find a random sampling of men willing to have their nether regions chopped apart in the interest of science. :) So I think, for the moment, literature reviews are the best we can do.
But the thing is, both the literature reviews posted (yours and mine) both showed an erect length increase after lig snipping.