Originally Posted by ModestoMan
Even assuming the Brava system works as advertised, I don’t think the principles that underlie that system (low pressure over long periods of time) would necessarliy affect the tunica the same way it affects breast tissue. Breast tissue is composed of relatively randomly oriented collagen arranged in some sort of 3D matrix. However, the tunica consists of very densely packed collagen fibers all aligned either axially (for the outer layer) or circumferentially (for the inner layer). So, it seems to me that penis enlargement would require a different kind of approach than breast enlargement.
There have been procedures where they insert steel rods into leg bones and slowly apply pressure to extend the length…and it works.
The collagan, ligaments, muscle, nerves,blood vessels, well …just about everything in the leg has to lengthen along with the bone.
I think there are few tissues in the human frame that doesn’t respond to slow steady pressure, either pulling or compression…thats out of necessity.
In penis enlargement I think we have two major ways of expanding the tissue.
One is frank force, enough to overcome the inherent integrity of the tissue. Force that exceeds the tissues ability to maintain its present proportions. Deformation force.
Two, a much milder force that causes stimulation of cellular changes. I think that the BRAVA system is in this category. (personally I feel this category can lead to the greatest AMOUNT of change.)
I think a really successful pe program can use the best of these two and produce fairly sustained expansion over a period of time.