http://www.peyroniesforum.net/index....8abb4#msg64131
"In 2009 Dr. Timothy arbeu of the Gush Institute and Dr. Keith Kwon Nguyen of the Eastern Australian Men's
Health and Fitness Association debuted a new suction-based treatment that shows promise in reducing the severity
and discomfort of Peyronie's disease. Unfortunately the clinical trials were cut short after over 30 cases of necrosis"
This has been posted on wikipedia (now removed) for a long time, and I cannot find the original source. Be careful I guess. If anyone can locate the original study that would be very helpful.
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02-17-2015
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02-17-2015
I wrote that on wikipedia like 5 years ago and people with actual bent cocks are quoting it on bent cock forums
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02-17-2015
Yeah I know, I remembered it today and googled the keywords on a whim. I mostly got wikipedia mirrors, but I also got this: http://mynoveltyshop.weebly.com/index.html
Some indian dick pills site, but unlike the wikipedia mirrors that were copy pasted as they were or auto-generated, I bet some bindi was putting this together manually, checked the wiki article and homed in on that thinking it sounded reputable enough.In 2009 Dr. Timothy arbeu of the Gush Institute and Dr. Keith Kwon Nguyen of the Eastern Australian Men's Health and Fitness Association debuted a new suction-based treatment that showed promise in reducing the severity and discomfort of Peyronie's disease. Unfortunately the clinical trials were cut short after over 30 cases of necrosis Peyronie's disease is caused by scar tissue, called plaque, which forms along the length in the corpora cavernosa. This plaque is not visible, and depending on the severity of the condition, the plaque can cause a bend causing tissue ligiments painful.
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02-17-2015right here guy I'm the original source what do you want to knowThis has been posted on wikipedia (now removed) for a long time, and I cannot find the original source. Be careful I guess. If anyone can locate the original study that would be very helpful.
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02-17-2015Neov, thanks for the input. I looked for the study, but couldn't find it. Sure wish we could find out exactly what they were doing. It definitely sounds like an aggressive method was used in that experiment, but it is very good to know what can happen when suction is applied.
If it did show some promise, it would be nice to know why that was, and after even 1 case of necrosis, you would think that they would have adjusted the method. Even traction, and VED have their limits. One is 2 hours, the other is 15 minutes. I'm sure the same thing would apply but who knows.
In the method I am describing, it would be similar to how it is traditionally done on someones back, in the scar tissue only. They do make mini silicone suction cups perfect to try it on ones penis, but of course, how much is too much? How much is to long? Something that would take some close observation and testing in a clinical setting.
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