Masculinity of the forearm

The Briton, who has just received a new penis thanks to an experimental surgery, is delighted to announce that he has finally felt like a man.

Mohammed Abad, 40, lost his genitals in a severe road accident when he was just six years old. Only now will the man have a chance to consummate his marriage – even though he is already two years after the wedding. Doctors rebuilt his over 15 cm manhood using fat taken from his own forearm. Now working as a bodyguard, Mo will be able to experience real sex for the first time, and if he is lucky, he will fulfill his dream of fatherhood.

As hard to believe, Mohammed’s young wife realized something was wrong only after an arranged wedding. Three days after the ceremony, the groom broke down completely and told the woman the truth. – I have always known that something is missing in my life – Mo complains. – I wanted to be normal, like everyone else. If everyone has sex, why shouldn’t I? Now I can finally lead a normal life. My wife is glad everything turned out so well. And I love to stand naked in front of the mirror and stare at myself. I have what you need and the right size. I couldn’t be more happy about it. And finally I feel like a man.

Mo and his wife, however, need to be more patient with family planning than other couples. The man still needs more operations in September to connect the nerve endings with his urethra. Only then will Mohammed have a chance for a first erection.

Mo claims that his wife, whose identity we will not reveal, has always supported him 12%. She accompanied him on a trip to University College London Hospital, where last year a patient underwent a XNUMX-hour operation to rebuild his penis, shaped like a roll.

Speaking about the shock of a woman when she found out about her husband’s defect after getting married, Mo says: “She asked why I didn’t tell her anything before. But I didn’t really tell anyone about it. Wife was the first person I trusted. I found the strength to confess everything to her only because I found out about the chance of surgery. I was hoping to become like the others soon. We haven’t consummated our relationship yet, and I’m looking forward to this moment. I’ve always dreamed of having two children. Now this dream may come true.

Born in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, Mo suffered a serious injury in the street where he was pushed by his colleagues in a snowball fight. The boy fell under a speeding car and for a moment the car dragged him along the way. The child’s penis and his left testicle were torn to shreds, while the right testicle was crushed into the body. Little Mo lost a lot of blood and the doctors gave him no more than 12 hours to live.

However, the child not only did not die, but was able to walk again after a few months. A few days after the accident, the surgeon used the skin taken from Mohammed’s leg to form a small penis for him to use the bathroom. By the definition of the patient, it was just a peeing tube.

At that time, the doctor showed skill, but such a penis could not grow, and Mohammed had no feeling in it. The crippled man has never used the toilet while standing and still cannot do it – he still has to wait for the final procedure.

He spent most of his childhood in hospital and underwent over a hundred surgeries to rebuild his manhood. Two years after the accident, Mohammed’s family moved to Edinburgh, where the man lives to this day. Though he never confided it to anyone, he was followed by the whispered fame of a man without a cock. He was a loner as a teenager, avoided girls and made friends with difficulty.

But when Mo turned thirty he realized it was time for a change. Desperate, he began looking for specialists who could help him. The answer to his prayers came five years ago: he unexpectedly received a letter in which he was offered a penis reconstruction surgery, pioneering in Great Britain. Then it was time for a long and anxious wait for the decision of the state health service, which ultimately paid for his surgery in distant London.

The first surgery, scheduled for last spring, was canceled at the last minute when it turned out that the patient had been diagnosed with dangerously high blood sugar levels. Ultimately, Mohammed underwent surgery in November. His 15 cm penis was formed from fat from his left forearm.

A pair of urologists and andrologists, Christopher and David Ralph, rolled the patient’s skin into a roll and placed it in the right place. From the remnants of the originally formed penis, doctors prepared a scrotum for the only surviving testicle that is capable of producing sperm. Experts believe that when everything is healed, Mo will be able to have children.

In April, its new organ will be given its final shape. He will have to wait for real sex until the last operation, in September. “Others have considered me a freak until now,” Mo complains. – But I grew up hearing whispers: this dude doesn’t have a dick! I suppressed it all within myself. It was hard for me. People didn’t want to be friends with me, I avoided girls. Everyone suspected that something was wrong with me. Meanwhile, I’ve always dreamed of a normal life – marriage and sex – and now I will have it.

According to the doctor

Nim Christopher is a urologist and andrologist practicing at University College London Hospital. “Some men do not have a penis for various reasons, and we are now able to form an organ for them to urinate and ejaculate,” he says. – For this purpose, we use tissue taken from the forearm, which has a structure very similar to sausage. Gradually, nerves grow into the new penis. Although the end result of this process will not be an ordinary penis, we create something that is similar to it, and from a psychological point of view, surgery is an invaluable plus for the patient.

Tekst: Matt Wilkinson

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