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Wikipedia

Phalloplasty

Phalloplasty is the construction or reconstruction of a penis or the artificial modification of the penis by surgery. The term is also occasionally used to refer to penis enlargement.[1]

Phalloplasty
SpecialtyUrology
ICD-10-PCS0VUS07
CPT54304
[edit on Wikidata]

History edit

Russian surgeon Nikolaj Bogoraz performed the first reconstruction of a total penis using rib cartilage in a reconstructed phallus made from a tubed abdominal flap in 1936.[2][3][4] The first female to male sex reassignment surgery was performed in 1946 by Sir Harold Gillies on fellow physician Michael Dillon, documented in Pagan Kennedy's book The First Man-Made Man.[citation needed] Gillies' technique remained the standard one for decades. Later improvements in microsurgery made more techniques available.

Indications edit

A complete construction or reconstruction of a penis can be performed on patients who:[citation needed]

Techniques and related procedures edit

There are different techniques for phalloplasty. Construction of a new penis (sometimes called a neophallus) typically involves taking a tissue flap from a donor site (such as the forearm). Extending the urethra through the length of the neophallus is another goal of phalloplasty.[5]

Temporary lengthening can also be gained by a procedure that releases the suspensory ligament where it is attached to the pubic bone, thereby allowing the penis to be advanced toward the outside of the body. The procedure is performed through a discreet horizontal incision located in the pubic region where the pubic hair will help conceal the incision site. However, scar formation can cause the penis to retract. Therefore, the American Urological Association "considers the division of the suspensory ligament of the penis for increasing penile length in adults to be a procedure which has not been shown to be safe or efficacious."[6][7]

Penile implants edit

 
An inflatable penile implant inserted into corpus cavernosum of the penis

Phalloplasty requires an implanted penile prosthesis to achieve an erection. Penile prostheses are implanted devices intended to restore the erectile rigidity in cisgender men and to build a neophallus (new penis) in transgender men. Penile implants have been used in phalloplasty surgeries both in cisgender and transgender patients since 1970s.[8]

There are two main types of penile implants – malleable (also known as non-inflatable or semi-rigid) and inflatable implants. Both types have a pair of cylinders implanted into the penis, replacing the non-erectile tissue in cisgender men and serving as the core for the neophallus in the phalloplasty procedure. The cylinder of the inflatable implant is filled with sterile saline solution. Pumping saline into the chambers of this cylinder produces an erection. The glans of the penis, however, remains unaffected.

In sex reassignment surgeries, a new penis is formed with the use of a penile implant surrounded with a tissue flap.[9]

The pump unit of inflatable penile implants resembles a human testicle and can serve as an artificial testicle for concomitant scrotoplasty.[10]

Initially, standard penile implants were used in phalloplasty procedures. However, since there is no corpus cavernosum in the penis undergoing phalloplasty, and the fact that standard penile implants were designed to be implanted in corpus cavernosum, there were many adverse outcomes.[11] Since 2015, Zephyr Surgical Implants proposes malleable and inflatable penile implants particularly designed for phalloplasty surgeries.[12] Implantation procedures are usually done in a separate surgery to allow time for proper healing.

Explanation of techniques edit

Flap from the arm edit

[13] Sensation is retained through the clitoral tissue at the base of the neophallus.[13] Nerves from the flap and the tissue it has been attached to may eventually connect.[14]

Flap from the side of the chest edit

The disadvantages include:

  • Uses a motor nerve so erogenous sensation cannot be achieved, only tactile sensation.
  • It can pull the nipple to the side causing it to be off the usual location.

Flap from the leg edit

 
Example of stage 1 female-to-male sex reassignment prior to glansplasty penis with tissue grafting scar on the left hip

Pubic area flap edit

Latissimus dorsi phalloplasty edit

This phalloplasty method is from latissimus dorsi musculocutaneous flap.[15]

Gillies technique edit

Abdominal muscle edit

Subcutaneous soft silicone implant edit

This phalloplasty procedure involves the insertion of a subcutaneous soft silicone implant under the penile skin.[16][17][18][19]

No-touch surgical technique edit

The no-touch surgical technique for penile prosthesis implantation is a surgical procedure developed by J. Francois Eid for the implantation of a penile implant.[20] Implantation through the use of the "No-Touch" technique minimizes the risk of infection.

As advancements in the design and manufacturing process of the IPP improved its mechanical survival, infection has emerged as the leading cause of implant failure. Although relatively infrequent (varying from .06% to 8.9%) infection of a penile prosthesis results in serious medical consequences for the bearer, requiring complete removal of the device and permanent loss of penile size and anatomy.[21][22] Bacterial contamination of the device occurs during the surgery, and is caused by allowing direct or indirect contact of the prosthesis with the patient's skin. Over 70% of infections form from skin organisms including Staphylococcus epidermis, Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus and Candida albicans.[23]

Traditional strategies to combat infections aim at decreasing skin colony count such as scrubbing skin preparation with alcohol and chlorhexidine or kill bacteria once the implant is contaminated by skin flora such as intravenous antibiotics, antibiotic irrigation and antibiotic-coated implants. The "No-Touch" technique is unique in that it aims to prevent bacterial contamination of the prosthesis by completely eliminating contact of the device with the skin.[24]

Paired with the antibiotic-coated implant, the "No Touch" technique decreases infection to a rate of 0.46%, opposing the traditional method which has an infection rate of 5%. The use of an antibiotic-coated implant and a no-touch surgical technique with skin preparation measures and peri-operative antibiotic use has been found to be of high importance in the prevention of infection among penile implants.[25] Eid developed the technique in 2006 on the hypothesis that eliminating any contact between the prosthesis and the skin, either directly or indirectly via surgical instruments or gloves, should reduce the incidence of contamination of the device with skin flora responsible for infection.[23][26]

Procedure edit

Three days prior to the procedure, a patient is placed on oral fluoroquinolone, an antibacterial drug. During this time, the patient scrubs the lower abdomen and genitals daily with chlorhexidine soap. On the day of the surgery, vancomycin and gentamicin are administered intravenously one to two hours prior to the procedure. The lower abdomen and genitals are shaved, scrubbed for five minutes with a chlorhexidine sponge and prepped with chorhexidine/alcohol applicator. The area is then draped with a surgical drape and a Vi Drape over the genitalia. Before the incision is made, a Foley catheter is inserted in the bladder through the urethra.

A 3 cm (1.2 in) scrotal incision is made on the penoscrotal raphe and carried down through the subcutaneous tissue to the Buck's fascia. A Scott retractor, a flexible device that holds open the skin of the surgical site, is applied to the area.

Up until this stage of the surgery, the process has been consistent with the sanitary practices associated with standard surgical sterility.[27] At this stage of the "No-Touch" technique, after the incision has been made, all instruments, including surgical gloves that have touched skin are discarded. A loose drape is then deployed over the entire surgical field and secured at the periphery with adhesive strips. A small opening in the drape is then made overlying the incision and yellow hooks utilized to secure the edges of the opening to the edges of the incision, completely covering and isolating the patient's skin. At this point, new instruments and equipment are replaced and the entire prosthesis is inserted through the small opening of the loose drape. The loose drape allows for manipulation of the penis and scrotum required for this procedure without touching the skin.

Implantation of the device continues with an incision and dilation of corpora, sizing and placing the penile cylinders, and placement of the pump in the scrotum and the reservoir in the retropubic space. Saline is used throughout the implantation for irrigation. Once the corporotomies are closed and all of the tubing and components of the prosthesis covered with a layer of Buck's fascia, subcutaneous tissues are closed and the "No-Touch" drape is removed and the skin closed.[20]

Future edit

In the future, bioengineering may be used to create fully functional penises.[28] Penis transplantation could also become a standardized method.[29]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Penis Enlargement". The Aesthetic Society. 28 April 2020. Retrieved 11 March 2023.
  2. ^ Rashid M, Tamimy MS (2013). "Phalloplasty: The dream and the reality". Indian J Plast Surg. 46 (2): 283–93. doi:10.4103/0970-0358.118606. PMC 3901910. PMID 24501465.
  3. ^ Segal RL, Camper SB, Burnett AL (2014). "Modern utilization of penile prosthesis surgery: a national claim registry analysis". Int J Impot Res. 26 (5): 167–71. doi:10.1038/ijir.2014.11. PMID 24830674. S2CID 205152894.
  4. ^ Schultheiss D, Gabouev AI, Jonas U (2005). "Nikolaj A. Bogoraz (1874-1952): pioneer of phalloplasty and penile implant surgery". J Sex Med. 2 (1): 139–46. doi:10.1111/j.1743-6109.2005.20114.x. PMID 16422917.
  5. ^ Morrison, Shane D.; Shakir, Afaaf; Vyas, Krishna S.; Kirby, Johanna; Crane, Curtis N.; Lee, Gordon K. (September 2016). "Phalloplasty: A Review of Techniques and Outcomes". Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. 138 (3): 594–615. doi:10.1097/PRS.0000000000002518. ISSN 0032-1052. PMID 27556603. S2CID 40941956.
  6. ^ . www.auanet.org. Archived from the original on 26 July 2019. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  7. ^ Chen, Kuo-Liang; Eberli, Daniel; Yoo, James J.; Atala, Anthony (23 February 2010). "Bioengineered corporal tissue for structural and functional restoration of the penis". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 107 (8): 3346–3350. Bibcode:2010PNAS..107.3346C. doi:10.1073/pnas.0909367106. PMC 2840474. PMID 19915140.
  8. ^ Carrion, Hernan; Martinez, Daniel; Parker, Justin; Hakky, Tariq; Bickell, Michael; Boyle, Alexander; Weigand, Luke; Carrion, Rafael (July 2016). "A History of the Penile Implant to 1974". Sexual Medicine Reviews. 4 (3): 285–293. doi:10.1016/j.sxmr.2016.05.003. PMID 27871961.
  9. ^ Kang, Audry; Aizen, Joshua M.; Cohen, Andrew J.; Bales, Gregory T.; Pariser, Joseph J. (June 2019). "Techniques and considerations of prosthetic surgery after phalloplasty in the transgender male". Translational Andrology and Urology. 8 (3): 273–282. doi:10.21037/tau.2019.06.02. PMC 6626310. PMID 31380234.
  10. ^ Chung, Eric (February 2017). "Penile prosthesis implant: scientific advances and technological innovations over the last four decades". Translational Andrology and Urology. 6 (1): 37–45. doi:10.21037/tau.2016.12.06. PMC 5313299. PMID 28217449.
  11. ^ van der Sluis, Wouter B.; Pigot, Garry L.S.; Al-Tamimi, Muhammed; Ronkes, Brechje L.; de Haseth, Kristin B.; Özer, Müjde; Smit, Jan Maerten; Buncamper, Marlon E.; Bouman, Mark-Bram (October 2019). "A Retrospective Cohort Study on Surgical Outcomes of Penile Prosthesis Implantation Surgery in Transgender Men After Phalloplasty". Urology. 132: 195–201. doi:10.1016/j.urology.2019.06.010. PMID 31229517. S2CID 195328117.
  12. ^ Pigot, Garry L.S.; Sigurjónsson, Hannes; Ronkes, Brechje; Al-Tamimi, Muhammed; van der Sluis, Wouter B. (January 2020). "Surgical Experience and Outcomes of Implantation of the ZSI 100 FtM Malleable Penile Implant in Transgender Men After Phalloplasty". The Journal of Sexual Medicine. 17 (1): 152–158. doi:10.1016/j.jsxm.2019.09.019. PMID 31680006. S2CID 207890601.
  13. ^ a b Al-Tamimi, Muhammed; Pigot, Garry L.; van der Sluis, Wouter B.; van de Grift, Tim C.; van Moorselaar, R. Jeroen A.; Mullender, Margriet G.; Weigert, Romain; Buncamper, Marlon E.; Özer, Müjde; de Haseth, Kristin B.; Djordjevic, Miroslav L. (November 2019). "The Surgical Techniques and Outcomes of Secondary Phalloplasty After Metoidioplasty in Transgender Men: An International, Multi-Center Case Series". The Journal of Sexual Medicine. 16 (11): 1849–1859. doi:10.1016/j.jsxm.2019.07.027. ISSN 1743-6095. PMID 31542350. S2CID 202731384.
  14. ^ Hontscharuk, Rayisa; Siotos, Charalampos; Schechter, Loren S. (13 November 2020). "Strategies for innervation of the neophallus". Plastic and Aesthetic Research. 7: 65. doi:10.20517/2347-9264.2020.124. ISSN 2347-9264. S2CID 228915526.
  15. ^ "Phalloplasty, neophallus, female to male surgery, transgender". Genital Surgery Belgrade. Retrieved 24 May 2022.
  16. ^ Shirvanian, V.; Lemperle, G.; Araujo Pinto, C.; Elist, J. J. (2014). "Shortened penis post penile prosthesis implantation treated with subcutaneous soft silicone penile implant: case report". International Journal of Impotence Research. 26 (3): 100–104. doi:10.1038/ijir.2013.44. PMID 24305609. S2CID 25075692.
  17. ^ . MDLinx. Archived from the original on 5 April 2023. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  18. ^ . SMSNA.org. Archived from the original on 1 March 2016. Retrieved 18 February 2016.
  19. ^ Hannah Smothers (27 January 2016). "Penis Implants Exist Now, and They Start at a Size Large". Cosmopolitan.com.
  20. ^ a b Eid, J. Francois (2011). "No-Touch Technique". J Sex Med. 8 (1): 5–8. doi:10.1111/j.1743-6109.2010.02137.x. PMID 21199375.
  21. ^ Mulcahy, John J. (2010). "Current approach to the treatment of penile implant infections". Therapeutic Advances in Urology. 2 (2): 69–75. doi:10.1177/1756287210370330. PMC 3126071. PMID 21789084.
  22. ^ Gomelsky, A.; Dmochowski, RR (2003). "Antibiotic prophylaxis in urologic prosthetic surgery". Current Pharmaceutical Design. 9 (12): 989–96. doi:10.2174/1381612033455198. PMID 12678865.
  23. ^ a b Eid, J. Francois; Wilson, Steven K.; Cleves, Mario; Salem, Emad A. (2012). "Coated Implants and "No Touch" Surgical Technique Decreases Risk of Infection in Inflatable Penile Prosthesis Implantation of 0.46%". Urology. 79 (6): 1310–5. doi:10.1016/j.urology.2011.11.076. PMID 22521187.
  24. ^ Carson, CC (2004). "Efficacy of antibiotic impregnation of inflatable penile prostheses in decreasing infection in original implants". J Urol. 171 (4): 1611–4. doi:10.1097/01.ju.0000118245.66976.e1. PMID 15017233.
  25. ^ Elmussareh, Muhammad; Goddard, Jonathan Charles; Summerton, Duncan John; Terry, Timothy Robin (2013). "Minimizing the risk of device infection in penile prosthetic surgery: a UK perspective". Journal of Clinical Urology. 6 (5): 280–288. doi:10.1177/2051415813488367. S2CID 57282051.
  26. ^ Muench, Peter J. (2013). "Infections Versus Penile Implants: The War on Bugs". Journal of Urology. 189 (5): 1631–1673. doi:10.1016/j.juro.2012.05.080. PMID 23085299.
  27. ^ Richard Pearcy & Raj Persad, publication date unknown, "Inflatable penile prosthesis," in BJU International Website Atlas of Surgery and Surgical Devices, see [1], accessed 31 May 2014
  28. ^ Chen KL, Eberli D, Yoo JJ, Atala A (November 2009). "Regenerative Medicine Special Feature: Bioengineered corporal tissue for structural and functional restoration of the penis". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 107 (8): 3346–50. Bibcode:2010PNAS..107.3346C. doi:10.1073/pnas.0909367106. PMC 2840474. PMID 19915140.
  29. ^ "A Pioneering Approach to Sex Reassignment Surgery from a World Leader in the Field". reports.mountsinai.org. Retrieved 24 May 2022.

Sources edit

  • Total Phalloplasty Using a Musculocutaneous Latissimus Dorsi Flap by Sava V. Perovic, Rados Djinovic (British Journal of Urology, Reconstructive Urology, Volume 100 Issue 4, Sep 2007)
  • New Technique of Total Phalloplasty With Reinnervated Latissimus Dorsi Myocutaneous Free Flap in Female-to-Male Transsexuals by Vesely, Jiri; Hyza, Petr; Ranno, Raul; Cigna, Emanuele; Monni, Nicola; al etc. (Annals of Plastic Surgery, Volume 58 Issue 5, May 2007)
  • Simultaneous Penis and Perineum Reconstruction Using a Combined Latissimus Dorsi-Scapular Free Flap with Intraoperative Penile Skin Expansion by Rohrich, Rod J.; Allen, Terry; Lester, Fred; Young, Jonathan P.; Katz, Scott L. (Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Volume 99 Issue 4, April 1997)
  • Neophalloplasty in Female-to-Male Transsexuals with the Island Tensor Fasciae Latae Flap by Santanelli, Fabio M.D., Ph.D.; Scuderi, Nicolò (Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Volume 105 Issue 6, May 2000)
  • A New Surgical Procedure for Phallic Reconstruction: Istanbul Flap by Mutaf, Mehmet (Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Volume 105 Issue 4, April 2000)
  • One-Stage Reconstruction of the Penis with Composite Iliac Crest and Lateral Groin Skin Flap by Sun, Guang-ci M.D.; Huang, Jin-jing (Annals of Plastic Surgery, Volume 15 Issue 6, December 1985)
  • A Novel Single-Flap Technique for Total Penile Reconstruction: The Pedicled Anterolateral Thigh Flap by Lee, Gordon K.; Lim, Angeline F.; Bird, Erin (Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Volume 124 Issue 1, July 2009)
  • Penile Reconstruction by the Free Scapular Flap and Malleable Penis Prosthesis by Yang, Mingyong; Zhao, Muxin; Li, Senkai; Li, Yangqun (Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Volume 59 Issue 1, July 2007)
  • Hage, J. Joris (1992). Peniplastica Totalis to Reassignment Surgery of the External Genitalia in Female-to-Male Transsexuals. VU University Press. ISBN 978-90-5383-115-1.
  • Long-Term Follow-Up of Total Penile Reconstruction with Sensate Osteocutaneous Free Fibula Flap in 18 Biological Male Patients by Sengezer, Mustafa; Öztürk, Serdar; Deveci, Mustafa; Odabasi, Zeki (Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Volume 114 Issue 2, August 2004)
  • Long-Term Fate of the Bony Component in Neophallus Construction with Free Osteofasciocutaneous Forearm or Fibula Flap in 18 Female-to-Male Transsexuals by Papadopulos, Nikolaos A.; Schaff, Juergen; Biemer, Edgar (Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Volume 109 Issue 3, March 2002)
  • Use of forearm free-flap phalloplasty in bladder exstrophy adults by Marc-Olivier Timsit, Pierre Mouriquand, Alain Ruffion, Alain Bouillot, Diala Dembelé, Arnaud Mejean, Fanny Lalloue, Albert Leriche and Nicolas Morel-Journel (BJU International, Volume 103 Issue 10, Dec 2008)
  • Phalloplasty for female transsexuals with sensate free forearm flap[dead link] by Rong-Hwang Fang, Jin-Teh Lin, Shiuh Ma (Microsurgery, Volume 15 Issue 5, Oct 2005)
  • Long-term outcome of forearm flee-flap phalloplasty in the treatment of transsexualism by Albert Leriche, Marc-Olivier Timsit, Nicolas Morel-Journel, André Bouillot, Diala Dembele and Alain Ruffion (BJU International, Volume 101 Issue 10, Jan 2008)
  • Penile Reconstruction: Is the Radial Forearm Flap Really the Standard Technique? by Monstrey, Stan; Hoebeke, Piet; Selvaggi, Gennaro; al etc. (Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Volume 124 Issue 2, August 2009)
  • Addressing the ideal requirements by free flap phalloplasty: Some reflections on refinements of technique by J. Joris Hage, Floris H. De Graaf (Microsurgery, Volume 14 Issue 9, Oct 2005)
  • Total Phallic Construction in Female to Male Transsexuals by Giulio Garaffa, Nim A. Christopher, David J. Ralph (Current Urology, Vol. 3, No. 3, 2009)
  • Gender Reassigment by Dan Greenwald and Wayne Stadelmann (eMedicine Journal, Volume 2 Number 7, 6 July 2001)
  • Gender Identity Disorders: Diagnostic and Surgical Aspects by Michael Sohn, and Hartmut Bosinski, MD (Journal of Sexual Medicine, Volume 4 Issue 5, Aug 2007)
  • Glans sculpting in phalloplasty — experiences in female-to-male transsexuals by Rong-Hwang Fang, Yi-Sheng Kaoa, Shiuh Ma, Jin-Teh Lin (Journal of Plastic, Reconstructive & Aesthetic Surgery, Volume 51, Issue 5, July 1998)
  • Severe Penile Injuries: Etiology, Management and Outcomes by Sava V. Perovic, Urologia Polska (Polish Journal of Urology) 2005/58/3, ISSN 0500-7208.

External links edit

phalloplasty, construction, reconstruction, penis, artificial, modification, penis, surgery, term, also, occasionally, used, refer, penis, enlargement, specialtyurologyicd, pcs0vus07cpt54304, edit, wikidata, contents, history, indications, techniques, related,. Phalloplasty is the construction or reconstruction of a penis or the artificial modification of the penis by surgery The term is also occasionally used to refer to penis enlargement 1 PhalloplastySpecialtyUrologyICD 10 PCS0VUS07CPT54304 edit on Wikidata Contents 1 History 2 Indications 3 Techniques and related procedures 4 Penile implants 5 Explanation of techniques 5 1 Flap from the arm 5 2 Flap from the side of the chest 5 3 Flap from the leg 5 4 Pubic area flap 5 5 Latissimus dorsi phalloplasty 5 6 Gillies technique 5 7 Abdominal muscle 5 8 Subcutaneous soft silicone implant 5 9 No touch surgical technique 5 9 1 Procedure 5 10 Future 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksHistory editRussian surgeon Nikolaj Bogoraz performed the first reconstruction of a total penis using rib cartilage in a reconstructed phallus made from a tubed abdominal flap in 1936 2 3 4 The first female to male sex reassignment surgery was performed in 1946 by Sir Harold Gillies on fellow physician Michael Dillon documented in Pagan Kennedy s book The First Man Made Man citation needed Gillies technique remained the standard one for decades Later improvements in microsurgery made more techniques available Indications editA complete construction or reconstruction of a penis can be performed on patients who citation needed Have congenital anomalies such as micropenis epispadias and hypospadias Have lost their penis Desire gender affirming surgery as part of their gender transition Techniques and related procedures editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message There are different techniques for phalloplasty Construction of a new penis sometimes called a neophallus typically involves taking a tissue flap from a donor site such as the forearm Extending the urethra through the length of the neophallus is another goal of phalloplasty 5 Temporary lengthening can also be gained by a procedure that releases the suspensory ligament where it is attached to the pubic bone thereby allowing the penis to be advanced toward the outside of the body The procedure is performed through a discreet horizontal incision located in the pubic region where the pubic hair will help conceal the incision site However scar formation can cause the penis to retract Therefore the American Urological Association considers the division of the suspensory ligament of the penis for increasing penile length in adults to be a procedure which has not been shown to be safe or efficacious 6 7 Penile implants editMain article Penile implant nbsp An inflatable penile implant inserted into corpus cavernosum of the penisPhalloplasty requires an implanted penile prosthesis to achieve an erection Penile prostheses are implanted devices intended to restore the erectile rigidity in cisgender men and to build a neophallus new penis in transgender men Penile implants have been used in phalloplasty surgeries both in cisgender and transgender patients since 1970s 8 There are two main types of penile implants malleable also known as non inflatable or semi rigid and inflatable implants Both types have a pair of cylinders implanted into the penis replacing the non erectile tissue in cisgender men and serving as the core for the neophallus in the phalloplasty procedure The cylinder of the inflatable implant is filled with sterile saline solution Pumping saline into the chambers of this cylinder produces an erection The glans of the penis however remains unaffected In sex reassignment surgeries a new penis is formed with the use of a penile implant surrounded with a tissue flap 9 The pump unit of inflatable penile implants resembles a human testicle and can serve as an artificial testicle for concomitant scrotoplasty 10 Initially standard penile implants were used in phalloplasty procedures However since there is no corpus cavernosum in the penis undergoing phalloplasty and the fact that standard penile implants were designed to be implanted in corpus cavernosum there were many adverse outcomes 11 Since 2015 Zephyr Surgical Implants proposes malleable and inflatable penile implants particularly designed for phalloplasty surgeries 12 Implantation procedures are usually done in a separate surgery to allow time for proper healing Explanation of techniques editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Flap from the arm edit 13 Sensation is retained through the clitoral tissue at the base of the neophallus 13 Nerves from the flap and the tissue it has been attached to may eventually connect 14 Flap from the side of the chest edit The disadvantages include Uses a motor nerve so erogenous sensation cannot be achieved only tactile sensation It can pull the nipple to the side causing it to be off the usual location Flap from the leg edit nbsp Example of stage 1 female to male sex reassignment prior to glansplasty penis with tissue grafting scar on the left hipPubic area flap edit Latissimus dorsi phalloplasty edit This phalloplasty method is from latissimus dorsi musculocutaneous flap 15 Gillies technique edit Abdominal muscle edit Subcutaneous soft silicone implant edit This phalloplasty procedure involves the insertion of a subcutaneous soft silicone implant under the penile skin 16 17 18 19 No touch surgical technique edit The no touch surgical technique for penile prosthesis implantation is a surgical procedure developed by J Francois Eid for the implantation of a penile implant 20 Implantation through the use of the No Touch technique minimizes the risk of infection As advancements in the design and manufacturing process of the IPP improved its mechanical survival infection has emerged as the leading cause of implant failure Although relatively infrequent varying from 06 to 8 9 infection of a penile prosthesis results in serious medical consequences for the bearer requiring complete removal of the device and permanent loss of penile size and anatomy 21 22 Bacterial contamination of the device occurs during the surgery and is caused by allowing direct or indirect contact of the prosthesis with the patient s skin Over 70 of infections form from skin organisms including Staphylococcus epidermis Staphylococcus aureus Streptococcus and Candida albicans 23 Traditional strategies to combat infections aim at decreasing skin colony count such as scrubbing skin preparation with alcohol and chlorhexidine or kill bacteria once the implant is contaminated by skin flora such as intravenous antibiotics antibiotic irrigation and antibiotic coated implants The No Touch technique is unique in that it aims to prevent bacterial contamination of the prosthesis by completely eliminating contact of the device with the skin 24 Paired with the antibiotic coated implant the No Touch technique decreases infection to a rate of 0 46 opposing the traditional method which has an infection rate of 5 The use of an antibiotic coated implant and a no touch surgical technique with skin preparation measures and peri operative antibiotic use has been found to be of high importance in the prevention of infection among penile implants 25 Eid developed the technique in 2006 on the hypothesis that eliminating any contact between the prosthesis and the skin either directly or indirectly via surgical instruments or gloves should reduce the incidence of contamination of the device with skin flora responsible for infection 23 26 Procedure edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Three days prior to the procedure a patient is placed on oral fluoroquinolone an antibacterial drug During this time the patient scrubs the lower abdomen and genitals daily with chlorhexidine soap On the day of the surgery vancomycin and gentamicin are administered intravenously one to two hours prior to the procedure The lower abdomen and genitals are shaved scrubbed for five minutes with a chlorhexidine sponge and prepped with chorhexidine alcohol applicator The area is then draped with a surgical drape and a Vi Drape over the genitalia Before the incision is made a Foley catheter is inserted in the bladder through the urethra A 3 cm 1 2 in scrotal incision is made on the penoscrotal raphe and carried down through the subcutaneous tissue to the Buck s fascia A Scott retractor a flexible device that holds open the skin of the surgical site is applied to the area Up until this stage of the surgery the process has been consistent with the sanitary practices associated with standard surgical sterility 27 At this stage of the No Touch technique after the incision has been made all instruments including surgical gloves that have touched skin are discarded A loose drape is then deployed over the entire surgical field and secured at the periphery with adhesive strips A small opening in the drape is then made overlying the incision and yellow hooks utilized to secure the edges of the opening to the edges of the incision completely covering and isolating the patient s skin At this point new instruments and equipment are replaced and the entire prosthesis is inserted through the small opening of the loose drape The loose drape allows for manipulation of the penis and scrotum required for this procedure without touching the skin Implantation of the device continues with an incision and dilation of corpora sizing and placing the penile cylinders and placement of the pump in the scrotum and the reservoir in the retropubic space Saline is used throughout the implantation for irrigation Once the corporotomies are closed and all of the tubing and components of the prosthesis covered with a layer of Buck s fascia subcutaneous tissues are closed and the No Touch drape is removed and the skin closed 20 Future edit In the future bioengineering may be used to create fully functional penises 28 Penis transplantation could also become a standardized method 29 See also edit nbsp Transgender portal nbsp Medicine portalList of transgender related topics Metoidioplasty Penis enlargement Penis transplantation Sex reassignment surgeryReferences edit Penis Enlargement The Aesthetic Society 28 April 2020 Retrieved 11 March 2023 Rashid M Tamimy MS 2013 Phalloplasty The dream and the reality Indian J Plast Surg 46 2 283 93 doi 10 4103 0970 0358 118606 PMC 3901910 PMID 24501465 Segal RL Camper SB Burnett AL 2014 Modern utilization of penile prosthesis surgery a national claim registry analysis Int J Impot Res 26 5 167 71 doi 10 1038 ijir 2014 11 PMID 24830674 S2CID 205152894 Schultheiss D Gabouev AI Jonas U 2005 Nikolaj A Bogoraz 1874 1952 pioneer of phalloplasty and penile implant surgery J Sex Med 2 1 139 46 doi 10 1111 j 1743 6109 2005 20114 x PMID 16422917 Morrison Shane D Shakir Afaaf Vyas Krishna S Kirby Johanna Crane Curtis N Lee Gordon K September 2016 Phalloplasty A Review of Techniques and Outcomes Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery 138 3 594 615 doi 10 1097 PRS 0000000000002518 ISSN 0032 1052 PMID 27556603 S2CID 40941956 American Urological Association Penile Augmentation Surgery www auanet org Archived from the original on 26 July 2019 Retrieved 14 March 2018 Chen Kuo Liang Eberli Daniel Yoo James J Atala Anthony 23 February 2010 Bioengineered corporal tissue for structural and functional restoration of the penis Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107 8 3346 3350 Bibcode 2010PNAS 107 3346C doi 10 1073 pnas 0909367106 PMC 2840474 PMID 19915140 Carrion Hernan Martinez Daniel Parker Justin Hakky Tariq Bickell Michael Boyle Alexander Weigand Luke Carrion Rafael July 2016 A History of the Penile Implant to 1974 Sexual Medicine Reviews 4 3 285 293 doi 10 1016 j sxmr 2016 05 003 PMID 27871961 Kang Audry Aizen Joshua M Cohen Andrew J Bales Gregory T Pariser Joseph J June 2019 Techniques and considerations of prosthetic surgery after phalloplasty in the transgender male Translational Andrology and Urology 8 3 273 282 doi 10 21037 tau 2019 06 02 PMC 6626310 PMID 31380234 Chung Eric February 2017 Penile prosthesis implant scientific advances and technological innovations over the last four decades Translational Andrology and Urology 6 1 37 45 doi 10 21037 tau 2016 12 06 PMC 5313299 PMID 28217449 van der Sluis Wouter B Pigot Garry L S Al Tamimi Muhammed Ronkes Brechje L de Haseth Kristin B Ozer Mujde Smit Jan Maerten Buncamper Marlon E Bouman Mark Bram October 2019 A Retrospective Cohort Study on Surgical Outcomes of Penile Prosthesis Implantation Surgery in Transgender Men After Phalloplasty Urology 132 195 201 doi 10 1016 j urology 2019 06 010 PMID 31229517 S2CID 195328117 Pigot Garry L S Sigurjonsson Hannes Ronkes Brechje Al Tamimi Muhammed van der Sluis Wouter B January 2020 Surgical Experience and Outcomes of Implantation of the ZSI 100 FtM Malleable Penile Implant in Transgender Men After Phalloplasty The Journal of Sexual Medicine 17 1 152 158 doi 10 1016 j jsxm 2019 09 019 PMID 31680006 S2CID 207890601 a b Al Tamimi Muhammed Pigot Garry L van der Sluis Wouter B van de Grift Tim C van Moorselaar R Jeroen A Mullender Margriet G Weigert Romain Buncamper Marlon E Ozer Mujde de Haseth Kristin B Djordjevic Miroslav L November 2019 The Surgical Techniques and Outcomes of Secondary Phalloplasty After Metoidioplasty in Transgender Men An International Multi Center Case Series The Journal of Sexual Medicine 16 11 1849 1859 doi 10 1016 j jsxm 2019 07 027 ISSN 1743 6095 PMID 31542350 S2CID 202731384 Hontscharuk Rayisa Siotos Charalampos Schechter Loren S 13 November 2020 Strategies for innervation of the neophallus Plastic and Aesthetic Research 7 65 doi 10 20517 2347 9264 2020 124 ISSN 2347 9264 S2CID 228915526 Phalloplasty neophallus female to male surgery transgender Genital Surgery Belgrade Retrieved 24 May 2022 Shirvanian V Lemperle G Araujo Pinto C Elist J J 2014 Shortened penis post penile prosthesis implantation treated with subcutaneous soft silicone penile implant case report International Journal of Impotence Research 26 3 100 104 doi 10 1038 ijir 2013 44 PMID 24305609 S2CID 25075692 Shortened penis post penile prosthesis MDLinx Archived from the original on 5 April 2023 Retrieved 16 February 2016 A Retrospective Evaluation of the Safety and Effectiveness of a Silicone Block Implant for Elective Cosmetic Surgery of the Penis SMSNA org Archived from the original on 1 March 2016 Retrieved 18 February 2016 Hannah Smothers 27 January 2016 Penis Implants Exist Now and They Start at a Size Large Cosmopolitan com a b Eid J Francois 2011 No Touch Technique J Sex Med 8 1 5 8 doi 10 1111 j 1743 6109 2010 02137 x PMID 21199375 Mulcahy John J 2010 Current approach to the treatment of penile implant infections Therapeutic Advances in Urology 2 2 69 75 doi 10 1177 1756287210370330 PMC 3126071 PMID 21789084 Gomelsky A Dmochowski RR 2003 Antibiotic prophylaxis in urologic prosthetic surgery Current Pharmaceutical Design 9 12 989 96 doi 10 2174 1381612033455198 PMID 12678865 a b Eid J Francois Wilson Steven K Cleves Mario Salem Emad A 2012 Coated Implants and No Touch Surgical Technique Decreases Risk of Infection in Inflatable Penile Prosthesis Implantation of 0 46 Urology 79 6 1310 5 doi 10 1016 j urology 2011 11 076 PMID 22521187 Carson CC 2004 Efficacy of antibiotic impregnation of inflatable penile prostheses in decreasing infection in original implants J Urol 171 4 1611 4 doi 10 1097 01 ju 0000118245 66976 e1 PMID 15017233 Elmussareh Muhammad Goddard Jonathan Charles Summerton Duncan John Terry Timothy Robin 2013 Minimizing the risk of device infection in penile prosthetic surgery a UK perspective Journal of Clinical Urology 6 5 280 288 doi 10 1177 2051415813488367 S2CID 57282051 Muench Peter J 2013 Infections Versus Penile Implants The War on Bugs Journal of Urology 189 5 1631 1673 doi 10 1016 j juro 2012 05 080 PMID 23085299 Richard Pearcy amp Raj Persad publication date unknown Inflatable penile prosthesis in BJU International Website Atlas of Surgery and Surgical Devices see 1 accessed 31 May 2014 Chen KL Eberli D Yoo JJ Atala A November 2009 Regenerative Medicine Special Feature Bioengineered corporal tissue for structural and functional restoration of the penis Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 107 8 3346 50 Bibcode 2010PNAS 107 3346C doi 10 1073 pnas 0909367106 PMC 2840474 PMID 19915140 A Pioneering Approach to Sex Reassignment Surgery from a World Leader in the Field reports mountsinai org Retrieved 24 May 2022 Sources editTotal Phalloplasty Using a Musculocutaneous Latissimus Dorsi Flap by Sava V Perovic Rados Djinovic British Journal of Urology Reconstructive Urology Volume 100 Issue 4 Sep 2007 New Technique of Total Phalloplasty With Reinnervated Latissimus Dorsi Myocutaneous Free Flap in Female to Male Transsexuals by Vesely Jiri Hyza Petr Ranno Raul Cigna Emanuele Monni Nicola al etc Annals of Plastic Surgery Volume 58 Issue 5 May 2007 Simultaneous Penis and Perineum Reconstruction Using a Combined Latissimus Dorsi Scapular Free Flap with Intraoperative Penile Skin Expansion by Rohrich Rod J Allen Terry Lester Fred Young Jonathan P Katz Scott L Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Volume 99 Issue 4 April 1997 Neophalloplasty in Female to Male Transsexuals with the Island Tensor Fasciae Latae Flap by Santanelli Fabio M D Ph D Scuderi Nicolo Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Volume 105 Issue 6 May 2000 A New Surgical Procedure for Phallic Reconstruction Istanbul Flap by Mutaf Mehmet Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Volume 105 Issue 4 April 2000 One Stage Reconstruction of the Penis with Composite Iliac Crest and Lateral Groin Skin Flap by Sun Guang ci M D Huang Jin jing Annals of Plastic Surgery Volume 15 Issue 6 December 1985 A Novel Single Flap Technique for Total Penile Reconstruction The Pedicled Anterolateral Thigh Flap by Lee Gordon K Lim Angeline F Bird Erin Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Volume 124 Issue 1 July 2009 Penile Reconstruction by the Free Scapular Flap and Malleable Penis Prosthesis by Yang Mingyong Zhao Muxin Li Senkai Li Yangqun Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Volume 59 Issue 1 July 2007 Hage J Joris 1992 Peniplastica Totalis to Reassignment Surgery of the External Genitalia in Female to Male Transsexuals VU University Press ISBN 978 90 5383 115 1 Long Term Follow Up of Total Penile Reconstruction with Sensate Osteocutaneous Free Fibula Flap in 18 Biological Male Patients by Sengezer Mustafa Ozturk Serdar Deveci Mustafa Odabasi Zeki Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Volume 114 Issue 2 August 2004 Long Term Fate of the Bony Component in Neophallus Construction with Free Osteofasciocutaneous Forearm or Fibula Flap in 18 Female to Male Transsexuals by Papadopulos Nikolaos A Schaff Juergen Biemer Edgar Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Volume 109 Issue 3 March 2002 Use of forearm free flap phalloplasty in bladder exstrophy adults by Marc Olivier Timsit Pierre Mouriquand Alain Ruffion Alain Bouillot Diala Dembele Arnaud Mejean Fanny Lalloue Albert Leriche and Nicolas Morel Journel BJU International Volume 103 Issue 10 Dec 2008 Phalloplasty for female transsexuals with sensate free forearm flap dead link by Rong Hwang Fang Jin Teh Lin Shiuh Ma Microsurgery Volume 15 Issue 5 Oct 2005 Long term outcome of forearm flee flap phalloplasty in the treatment of transsexualism by Albert Leriche Marc Olivier Timsit Nicolas Morel Journel Andre Bouillot Diala Dembele and Alain Ruffion BJU International Volume 101 Issue 10 Jan 2008 Penile Reconstruction Is the Radial Forearm Flap Really the Standard Technique by Monstrey Stan Hoebeke Piet Selvaggi Gennaro al etc Journal of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Volume 124 Issue 2 August 2009 Addressing the ideal requirements by free flap phalloplasty Some reflections on refinements of technique by J Joris Hage Floris H De Graaf Microsurgery Volume 14 Issue 9 Oct 2005 Total Phallic Construction in Female to Male Transsexuals by Giulio Garaffa Nim A Christopher David J Ralph Current Urology Vol 3 No 3 2009 Gender Reassigment by Dan Greenwald and Wayne Stadelmann eMedicine Journal Volume 2 Number 7 6 July 2001 Gender Identity Disorders Diagnostic and Surgical Aspects by Michael Sohn and Hartmut Bosinski MD Journal of Sexual Medicine Volume 4 Issue 5 Aug 2007 Glans sculpting in phalloplasty experiences in female to male transsexuals by Rong Hwang Fang Yi Sheng Kaoa Shiuh Ma Jin Teh Lin Journal of Plastic Reconstructive amp Aesthetic Surgery Volume 51 Issue 5 July 1998 Severe Penile Injuries Etiology Management and Outcomes by Sava V Perovic Urologia Polska Polish Journal of Urology 2005 58 3 ISSN 0500 7208 External links editFemaletoMale org Information about Phalloplasty Video Minimally Invasive Penile Implant Surgery to correct erectile disfunction No touch technique Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phalloplasty amp oldid 1182903890, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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