A Ghanaian Sexopathologist specialist at Kumasi South Hospital in the
Ashanti Region, Dr. Samuel Amanamah, has successfully performed a penile
implant surgery in Ghana.
Dr. Amanamah is the first Ghanaian doctor to have done such surgery in the country.
The surgery was done in collaboration with
the Peace and Love Hospital and Derry Court Medical Practice.
The surgery, which took place at the Peace and Love Hospital, Kumasi,
was done by a 4 member team; Dr. Samuel Amanamah, Dr. (Mrs.) Beatrice
Wiafe Addai, Mr. Kofi Owusu Gyimah, Madam Esther Antwi.
Dr. Samuel Amanamah, who led the team was elated and remarked that
“this was a dream come true, that Ghanaians can now access this
treatment in Ghana.”
Erectile dysfunction is a silent “emotional killer” which plaques half of men between age 40 – 70 years.
It is estimated that only about 10% of patients seek professional help
although orthodox medicine practitioners confidently say that all men
with erectile dysfunction can be treated.
Surgical intervention (Penile Implant) is considered the definitive treatment when all forms of treatment fail.
The procedure, which is about two hours long with a hospital stay of
between 2-7 days, comes with a small incision which is virtually
invisible after healing.
Experts say the advantage of this surgery is that, patients, who
successfully undergo it, resume a normal sexual life with their
partners.
The experts also say patients can also have as many children as they want; if prior to surgery they were fertile.
Dr. Amanamah advised the public to see erectile dysfunction as a
disease like any other disease (Malaria, Typhoid etc.) and seek
professional help and desist from just shopping around for the latest
drug in town.
He said “there is always a cause for Erectile Dysfunction and sometimes
by just simply eliminating the cause, erection improves naturally.”
He also advised health personnel not to ignore or downplay the concerns
of patients with Erectile Dysfunction, because, for everyone patient
who comes with such problem there are nine of such patients who could
not report.
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