My ideal goal is to lengthen my tibias, my femurs, and my humerus and that should cure 95% of my body and height dysphoria. Assuming money is not an issue, I feel like I'm sometimes being delusional with such goal, but in theory it should be achievable. Has anyone ever achieved such goal before? What do u guys think?
That's too much...at most do femur and then humerus.
Do you really wanna go with 3 segments lengthening while young and healthy? So many complications, and do you wanna spend 5 years or so before returning to (not guaranteed) full capabilities?
Once you notice your torso is now short will you also do spine lengthening? Come on...
Some achieved this goal, but they'll never tell you their complications after spending so much money on this.
Quote from: belowbelowavg on September 06, 2023, 12:03:36 PMMy ideal goal is to lengthen my tibias, my femurs, and my humerus and that should cure 95% of my body and height dysphoria. Assuming money is not an issue, I feel like I'm sometimes being delusional with such goal, but in theory it should be achievable. Has anyone ever achieved such goal before? What do u guys think?
Humerus is not recommended from what Ive briefly come across. You can lose motor function in your hands.
According to dr Rozbruch in an interview 80% of his patients get 7-8 cm on their femurs and feels satisfied. So unless your're really short like under 165 cm / 5'5 to begin with, you will most likely feel saitsfied after femur lengthening.
I don’t know the exact stats but I think the vast majority of patients only get one segment done. And the vast majority of patients are satisfied, even if they don’t get the full 8cm on femurs. I’d bet that there’s actually a diminished level of satisfaction for quadrilateral patients after a couple of years when they don’t recover as well as their 8cm femur counterparts even though they got more height.
Start with one segment, see how it goes. Do femurs, then see if you feel "up to" doing all the rest of that. That's a whole lotta pain, downtime, and questionable recovery to do everything you mentioned.
i wish i can do humerous but have not heard any stories or success stories about it besides this guy that did like 30cm added height to his body on youtube. i cant imagine the pain for humerous though because how are u going to eat n ur arms are all weak.
What guy?
What guy?
Quote from: Beemer m3 on September 09, 2023, 03:38:23 PMi wish i can do humerous but have not heard any stories or success stories about it besides this guy that did like 30cm added height to his body on youtube. i cant imagine the pain for humerous though because how are u going to eat n ur arms are all weak.
I wouldn't really care for humerus, unless of course you have disproportionately short arms relative to your current body. Arm length is often considered of secondary importance in terms of proportionality and general aesthetics.
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