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ARTICLE |

Inflatable Penile Prosthesis

Domeena C. Renshaw, MD, MB, ChB
JAMA. 1979;241(24):2637-2638. doi:10.1001/jama.1979.03290500045023.
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ABSTRACT

"Erectile Impotence Treated With an Implantable, Inflatable Prosthesis: Five Years of Clinical Experience" by Scott et al (p 2609) is an important article because it confirms that phallic worship is alive and well in the United States today. Humans remain as phallocentric as they have been throughout recorded history. Pills and potions have long been sought as aphrodisiacs, but the history of surgical treatment of impotence began four centuries ago (Urology 3:401-405, 1975) with interesting experiments on cadavers. In this century—knowledge of Y chromosomes notwithstanding—a king divorced one wife for having borne only girls and no boys. In biblical days kingship was directly linked to fertility and potency. When the aging King David's erections were not restored by ministrations of a fair young virgin (the first described surrogate) he stepped down from the throne in favor of Adonijah. Would implantation of a penile prosthesis have altered the course of history?

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