http://exosurge.com/styled-12/
This new technology is gonna be tested on humans 2024. They need people who are willing to participate in the study. They already did one where they got rid of curvature and scartissue for many people. Its a form of gas that makes medicine travel much deeper into the tissues. Very interesting.
The before and after pics certainly look promising.
Why do these websites always look like absolute garbage? They don't instil much faith.
This looks way more like "we're marketing a product" than a research-based scientific breakthrough.
Happy to see how this unfolds, but please don't get your hopes up. What I found most perplexing was their repeated pictures of "improvement" while measuring the penis curve from completely different angles in the "before" and "after" pictures. That proves absolutely nothing.
And I agree - the website is low-rent, at best.
Again, I'm seeing a marketing effort, not something with powerful scientific bona fides.
nemo
Man, if this works as explained would be awesome!
This technology seems interesting. I wouldnt get my hopes up to 100 but its definitely something positive for our situation. It might hold potential.
ExoSurge® is the world's first clinically-proven treatment to conservatively and permanently remove plaques and fibrosis associated with a Peyronie's diagnosis.
https://exosurge.com/styled-12/
This piqued my interest, does anyone know more about this? Or is this also just a misrepresentation, and it's about making money?
It is always nice to hope but unfortunately their website is a complete mess. There are English mistakes, it is not even finished: notice the "Replace treatment illustration with this image" under the "Peyronie's standards" section, and also the image with "What is a successful Peyronie's TREATEN". My already faint hopes were dead by then. The website also mentions medical fraud, which seems like a cheap case of reverse psychology.
Anyway, another killer is the fact that they claim they have already treated hundreds of patients in Georgia since 2014. If something worked as well as they claim we would know it already.
This has been already posted here.
https://www.peyroniesforum.net/index.php/topic,19185.0 ADMIN- I have combined the 2 topics here.
I agree with opinions linked above - language mistakes, marketing catchy phrases, no scientific paper published... judge yourself.
Here is another website about this treatment:
https://morgansternhealth.com/peyronies-disease-cure/
Just doesn't look too impressive to me, as a layman. Would be interested to see if Dr. Trost sees any potential here.
nemo