A viable solution to the issue of how to lengthen the male penis can be found in the area of tissue expansion. But with all the mixed press regarding penis enlargement, and with concerns for safety with such methods as surgery, it's important to know this method is safe. Tissue expanders are safe, and they work!
A medical revolution
Tissue expansion is a revolutionary technique for human body modification, and has both a medical history over a century and ancient references to validate it. In recent (recorded) history, a medical practitioner (Codvilla) first used expansion for medical purposes in 1905
in an attempt to lengthen a femur. This experiment was followed up later in the century when the medical practitioner, Neuman expanded skin using an inflatable balloon in 1957. Many successful experiments followed, resulting in a body of medical knowledge and the invention
of new traction techniques.
Human tissue expansion has totally revolutionized plastic surgery during the past 30 years. Expanders and guided tissue growth have now been successfully used to enlarge many areas of the body, from bone to muscle and everything in between.
Tissue expansion is now used to reconstruct breast tissue. Placed under the muscles of the chest (pectoralis major), expansion is now a common procedure for breast reconstruction after surgical removal of breast tissue due to cancer (mastectomy). This allows a ‘filling in' of
the missing tissue, and a return to a more natural appearance.
Burn patients have also seen fabulous recoveries through treatment with a tissue expander to increase available skin, rebuilding their appearance without the massive scarring that typically results from such injuries. In short, tissue expansion has revolutionized
reconstructive surgery.
Now tissue expanders of a different kind are being used in Europe and in North America to safely and successfully increase penis length.
Centuries of proof
There can be no question as to the effectiveness of tissue expanders – the list of medical proof is a mile long.
But tissue creation through stretching is not limited to the last 100 years of medical history. In Thailand/Burma, Indonesia, and South America, tribal peoples have performed various body stretching as a cultural practice for many centuries. Possibly the best known are the ‘Giraffe Women' of Thailand.
The Giraffe Women live among the ‘Hill People' (or Pa Dong Karen) who live near the borders of modern-day Buma and Thailand. They are probably the best known example of native cultures that practice body stretching. Known as the Giraffe Women for their superhumanly stretched necks, this tribe has practiced body stretching over many generations.
It is a tradition that some of the women in the tribe wear, by choice, a large number of ornamental brass rings around their necks. Starting when they are young (6 or 8 years old), and slowly, adding one ring at a time, lengthen the distance between their shoulders and heads.
The process takes many years, but the results are astounding – and very real.
The current record, according to one of the woman, is 28 brass rings, although most stop when they get to about 20. This example proves vividly that soft tissue isn't the only part of the body that responds to traction, but that even bones can be modified over time.
In South America, the Suya tribesmen of the Amazon have practiced ritual lip and ear stretching for spiritual and cultural reasons. Young
men of the tribe had their lips and ears pierced when still young, and over several years stretch them sufficiently to hold disks several
inches across. The amount of stretch could equal a 300% size increase or more from the original size of the tissue.
In Africa, the women of the Mursi tribe who live in the Omo Valley of southern Ethiopia also wear lip disks, a practice continued there for centuries. While this may look wild to outsiders, these disks marked the wearers as women of status, with the larger disks representing
both sexual maturity and social position. Some of the Mursi women have developed their lips so far as to be able to pull them over their
own heads!
While lip disks are worn to increase the size of the lower lip, the pressure they put on the jawbone also affects it over the long term. The teeth and jaw gradually give way under the continued pressure, gradually forcing them to arch backwards out of the normal ‘u' shape of
the jaw. This is assumed to be an unwanted side effect, but shows that pressure does affect the human body.
The lesson here: the body absolutely responds to forces put upon it. Stretching is the only viable, proven route to body modification for either medical or aesthetic reasons.
With the list of reports about the effectiveness of medical tissue expansion and the long history in native practices, there can be little doubt that with the correct application of force and a healthy regime, the penis CAN AND WILL be made larger by proper use of a traction device .
A safe, modern solution
Using a tissue expander for several hours each day will result in measurable results in just months. These devices are typically low-profile
and fit inconspicuously beneath loose clothing, and can thus be worn during normal, non-physical activities.
Traction devices use the principles that tissue responds to stretching by creating new tissue, not just stretching what is already there. Cell mitosis is the process by which cells divide to reproduce themselves. Traction puts a gentle tension on the penis, pulling the cells apart. This intracellular tension causes the body to undergo cell mitosis and grow new cells to relieve the tension. Your penis actually grows new tissue.
These groundbreaking devices give you absolute control of both the time and amount of tension put on your penis. These devices allow the penis to be enlarged without invasive and potentially damaging surgery. They are the safest, most reliable method to modern penis enlargement.
Francis B. Quinn M.D., Stephanie Cordes M.D., Karen H. Calhoun, Jr., M.D., Tissue Expanders. UTMB Dept. of Otolaryngology Grand Rounds, October 15, 1997.
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