That would be the urethra inside a formation named Corpus Spongiosum.
What happens in this more recent SRS technique seems to be (from the little I read) a recreation of that from a radial forearm flap, which seems to use part of the radial artery to reconstruct the urethra. It's a technique also used in penile cancer patients or when penile reconstruction is required. Seems like a very long (14hrs) operation. There are all sorts of complications, hospitalization after procedure is like 2 weeks, some study note satisfactory results in 7 out of 9 patients.
That’s vastly optimistic.
And depends on what you consider a “satisfactory result”.
(Of course the doctors have little reason to thoroughly study the patients post surgery, and surveys usually have a low response rate.)
But some doctors have stopped doing them simply because of the complications compared to the benefit. (Being able to pee out of a duck.)
I’ve also seen some numbers where complications in the form of urethral blockage and infections are up around 40-50%
The problem is that women have a shorter urethra, and extending it is just asking for trouble and constant UTI’s.
Add to that the extra complications of having to bring in an extra surgeon to do the actual plumbing, having to pay him and the urology nurse, it’s just bad news all around.
(Doctors care, sure. But a doctor hailed in to do urology job for $10K on a patient he’ll never see again probably cares a tiny bit less.)
In other studies I've seen mentioned prosthetics, obviously this sort of frankenpenis is unable to achieve erection and the sort, so you likely need more surgery afterwards to allow for implants that you can pump to achieve "erection" and participate in penetrative sex, if you ever find a partner that is willing to engage in that.
Unwilling to watch the full surgery to confirm everything, now I might be a medic, but I have my limits when it comes to this sort of haram BS.
The implants are the big money maker, because they often have to be replaced every ten years. (Dependent on what type of implant.)
Kachiiing! Recurring revenue! The complications are again really high. I’ve seen figures from 30-50%
(According to one doc EVERY SINGLE of his patients that had it done, eventually needed to have it removed.)
The implant also makes it more likely for the rotdog to die because of lack of blood flow.
Some European countries have totally stopped paying for these, because the complications and efficacy doesn’t come anywhere near to match the price.