“…This decision should be taken with both the physician and the patient, and is usually based on the urologist's comfort with surgical approach, assessment of body habitus, presence of associated conditions (e.g., Peyronie's disease, spinal cord injury), manual dexterity of the patient, and overall cost. In most industrialized countries, if cost is not a limiting factor (e.g., reimbursement by third parties), the three-piece IPP is considered the "gold standard," accounting for 70% of implants in the United States [19], while 20% are two-piece (Ambicor™) and 10% are semirigid rods. This is because, despite its somewhat more complex insertion as it requires the placement of the two cylinders, the pump and the reservoir into the abdominal cavity, the three-piece implant gives the best rigidity and flaccidity since it fills every part of the corporal bodies, and its bigger capacity reservoir permits a better emptying of the cylinders avoiding erectile tissue deterioration, as witnessed with self-contained or two-piece devices with no reserve fluid volume [20].…”