MTF GENDER AFFIRMING SURGERY | APS GENDER CARE

PPV vs Colon Vaginoplasty: Which Technique Is Right for You? | APS

If you have researched MTF vaginoplasty in Thailand, you have likely come across two techniques that come up repeatedly as the most advanced options: Penile-Peritoneal Vaginoplasty (PPV) and Colon Vaginoplasty. Both are self-lubricating. Both offer excellent depth. Both are performed at APS Gender Care in Bangkok. And yet they are very different procedures — with different tissue sources, different recovery profiles, different long-term maintenance requirements, and different ideal patient profiles. This guide explains both techniques in plain language and helps you understand which one Dr. Ae is likely to recommend for your specific situation.

Why Self-Lubrication Matters — and Why It Narrows the Choice

Most patients researching vaginoplasty start by encountering the Skin Graft (Penile Inversion) technique — the most widely performed method worldwide. It creates a functional vaginal canal using penile and scrotal skin, and it remains a valid choice for many patients. But it has one significant drawback: the skin graft does not self-lubricate. Patients need to use a lubricant for penetrative intercourse indefinitely, and dilation is typically required for life to maintain depth.

For many patients, the question then becomes: is there a technique that more closely mimics the natural function of a natal female vagina — one that produces its own lubrication and requires less long-term maintenance? The answer is yes, and it narrows the field to two techniques: PPV and Colon Vaginoplasty.

Both use tissue that produces natural moisture. Both typically allow for reduced dilation over time. And both are more complex than the Skin Graft technique — requiring specialist surgical teams and more advanced facilities. At APS, both are performed routinely, which means patients can have an honest, informed conversation about which approach is genuinely better suited to their anatomy and goals.

What Is PPV (Penile-Peritoneal Vaginoplasty)?

PPV uses the peritoneum — the thin, elastic membrane that lines the inside of the abdominal cavity — to create the vaginal canal. The peritoneum is accessed laparoscopically through three or four small incisions (typically less than 1 cm each). A section of peritoneal tissue is carefully mobilised and pulled down to line the neovaginal canal, which is created through the standard perineal dissection. The external vulva — labia, clitoris, clitoral hood, urethral placement — is constructed by Dr. Ae using the same approach as other vaginoplasty techniques.

The result is a vaginal canal lined with peritoneal tissue that produces a natural serous fluid, giving the neovagina a degree of self-lubrication. The laparoscopic approach means minimal external scarring — just a few small marks on the lower abdomen that fade to near-invisibility within 12 months.

Key Characteristics of PPV

  • Tissue source: peritoneal membrane (abdominal lining)
  • Surgical approach: laparoscopic — minimal external scarring
  • Self-lubrication: yes — serous fluid produced by peritoneal tissue
  • Typical depth: 15–18 cm
  • Dilation: required initially, significantly reduced after 12 months
  • No bowel preparation required
  • No colorectal surgical team required
  • Hospital stay at APS: 5 nights
  • Suitable as a primary technique or as a revision of a previous vaginoplasty

What Is Colon Vaginoplasty?

Colon Vaginoplasty uses a segment of the sigmoid colon — the lower section of the large intestine — to create the vaginal canal. At APS, this is performed either as an open procedure or, increasingly, laparoscopically. The colorectal surgical team harvests the sigmoid colon segment, creates the bowel anastomosis (reconnecting the remaining bowel ends), and hands over to Dr. Ae’s team, who creates the neovaginal canal and external vulva.

The intestinal mucosa of the sigmoid colon produces mucus naturally, giving the colon neovagina robust self-lubrication — typically more pronounced and reliable than the serous fluid produced by peritoneal tissue. The sigmoid colon also allows for greater depth than most other techniques, making it the preferred choice for patients who have limited tissue availability or who need greater vaginal length.

Key Characteristics of Colon Vaginoplasty

  • Tissue source: sigmoid colon segment
  • Surgical approach: open or laparoscopic (APS offers both)
  • Self-lubrication: yes — intestinal mucosa produces consistent natural moisture
  • Typical depth: 17–22 cm — the greatest depth of any technique
  • Dilation: required initially, reduced significantly over time
  • Bowel preparation required before surgery
  • Colorectal surgical team required — APS has a dedicated specialist team
  • Hospital stay at APS: 5 nights
  • Preferred technique for revisions and patients with limited genital tissue

PPV vs Colon Vaginoplasty — Side-by-Side Comparison

Here is a direct comparison of the two techniques across the factors that matter most to patients making this decision:

A Final Word of Encouragement

FactorPPVColon Vaginoplasty
Tissue sourcePeritoneal membrane (abdominal lining)Sigmoid colon segment
Surgical approachLaparoscopic onlyOpen or laparoscopic
Self-lubricationDischarge/odour concernYes — intestinal mucus (more robust; subsides with time)
Typical depth15–18 cm17–22 cm
Dilation Protocol0-6 months: 2x/day; 6-12 months: 1x/day0-6 months: 2x/day; 6-12 months: 1x/day
Stenosis RiskLow-to-moderateVery low
Bowel prep requiredNoYes — specialist team at APS
Special surgical team neededYes — abdominal surgical teamYes — colorectal surgical team
External scarring3–4 tiny laparoscopic marks, fade in 12 monthsLaparoscopic or small C-section-like incision
Hospital stay5 nights5 nights
Best forMost first-time patients; natural low-maintenance resultLimited tissue; maximum depth; revisions; higher BMI
Discharge/odor concernMinimal — serous fluid is thin and clearMore pronounced mucus discharge initially
History of bowel conditionsSafe — no bowel involvementMay be contraindicated if active bowel disease

The most common question I get from patients who have researched both techniques is: which one feels more natural? The honest answer is that both produce excellent results — but they feel different. PPV produces a lighter, thinner natural moisture. Colon produces a more robust, mucus-like lubrication. For most patients without specific anatomical reasons to choose colon, PPV gives a result that is closer in texture and behaviour to natal female anatomy, with a simpler surgical procedure and a faster path to reduced dilation maintenance.

— Dr. Phatwira Pattarajierpan (Dr. Ae), Lead Surgeon, APS Gender Care Bangkok

The Key Differences That Actually Drive the Decision

The comparison table tells the clinical story, but in practice, the decision between PPV and Colon Vaginoplasty at APS comes down to a smaller number of factors that genuinely differentiate the two techniques for most patients.

Tissue availability and genital size

PPV requires sufficient penile tissue to create the outer portion of the vaginal canal, with the peritoneum lining the deeper section. Patients with smaller genital tissue — sometimes due to long-term HRT use that began early, prior orchiectomy, or natural anatomical variation — may not have enough tissue for a successful PPV result. In these cases, Colon Vaginoplasty is the preferred technique, as it does not rely on genital skin for the vaginal canal depth at all.

Discharge preferences

This is a practical consideration that patients sometimes overlook. Colon Vaginoplasty produces intestinal mucus — a natural and harmless secretion, but one that is thicker and more noticeable than the serous fluid from PPV. Some patients find this completely unremarkable. Others find it an ongoing nuisance. PPV’s lighter serous secretion is typically less noticeable in daily life. If discharge levels are a significant concern for you, this favours PPV.

Depth requirements

The vast majority of patients do not require maximum vaginal depth for satisfying sexual function. PPV’s 15–18 cm is more than sufficient for most. However, for patients who specifically want or need greater depth — or who are undergoing a revision of a previous vaginoplasty where the existing canal is short — Colon Vaginoplasty’s 17–22 cm depth makes it the stronger clinical choice.

Surgical complexity and recovery

PPV is the less complex of the two procedures — it does not require bowel preparation, does not involve a bowel anastomosis, and does not need a colorectal surgical team. This translates to a marginally lower risk profile for straightforward cases. Colon Vaginoplasty requires the collaboration of two specialist teams — at APS, the colorectal team harvests the sigmoid segment and manages the bowel anastomosis, while Dr. Ae’s team creates the vulva and neovaginal cavity. This collaboration is well-established at APS and the complication rates are comparable — but it is a more complex surgical event.

History of bowel conditions

Patients with a history of inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis) or prior bowel surgery may not be suitable for Colon Vaginoplasty, as using already-affected bowel tissue carries additional risk. For these patients, PPV is typically the safer self-lubricating alternative.

“I always tell patients: there is no universally better technique between PPV and colon. There is a better technique for you specifically, based on your anatomy, your tissue, your health history, and what you are looking for in your daily life post-surgery. When I see a patient for consultation, I am assessing all of those factors together — not just recommending whichever technique is most popular that month. Both produce beautiful, functional results when performed in the right patient.

— Dr. Phatwira Pattarajierpan (Dr. Ae), Lead Surgeon, APS Gender Care Bangkok

Which Technique Is Right for You? Two Patient Profiles

While every patient’s situation is unique and only a full consultation with Dr. Ae can determine the best approach, these two profiles give a practical sense of which technique tends to suit which patient:

PPV IS OFTEN THE BETTER FIT IF YOU:

  • Have sufficient genital tissue for the procedure
  • Want the most natural-feeling, low-maintenance result
  • Prefer lighter, thinner natural moisture over mucus-type lubrication
  • Want minimal external scarring
  • Have no history of bowel conditions
  • Are a first-time vaginoplasty patient
  • Want to significantly reduce dilation requirements after the first year

COLON VAGINOPLASTY IS OFTEN THE BETTER FIT IF YOU:

  • Have limited genital tissue (small anatomy, long-term HRT, prior orchiectomy)
  • Want maximum vaginal depth
  • Are undergoing a revision after a previous vaginoplasty
  • Are comfortable with a more pronounced mucus discharge
  • Have a higher BMI (colon technique is less affected by tissue limitation)
  • Have had prior skin graft vaginoplasty that lost depth

A note on revisions: If you have had a previous vaginoplasty elsewhere — and are looking to upgrade or correct the result, Laparoscopic Colon Vaginoplasty is almost always the preferred revision technique. PPV can be used in some revision cases, but the colon technique’s independence from existing penile tissue makes it more reliably applicable when scar tissue from a prior procedure is present.

APS’s Approach: Honest Recommendation, Not One-Size-Fits-All

At APS Gender Care, we perform both PPV and Colon Vaginoplasty regularly — and we do not push patients toward either technique for commercial or operational reasons. The recommendation Dr. Ae makes during consultation is based entirely on your anatomy, your goals, and your health history.

That said, if we are asked to generalize: for most first-time vaginoplasty patients with typical genital tissue availability and no specific reasons to choose colon, PPV is our most commonly recommended self-lubricating technique. The reasons are straightforward: it is less surgically complex, does not require bowel preparation, produces a lighter and more natural-feeling moisture, and delivers excellent depth for the majority of patients’ needs. The laparoscopic approach also means virtually invisible scarring.

Colon Vaginoplasty, however, is the technique we most often recommend for patients with limited tissue, patients pursuing a revision, and patients who specifically want maximum depth or are comfortable with more pronounced lubrication. APS has a dedicated colorectal surgical team that works alongside Dr. Ae on every colon vaginoplasty case — the collaboration is seamless, the protocols are strict, and the outcomes consistently excellent.

Both techniques at APS include: surgical team, an anaesthesiologist (spinal block or general anersthesia), 5-night hospital stay with meals, post-operative medication, post-operative dilation set, daily nurse visits, and all clinic follow-ups during your stay in Bangkok. Pricing information is sent before your consultation — contact APS via contact form or chat with us on WhatsApp to request it.

The Best Way to Make This Decision

Reading about PPV and Colon Vaginoplasty gives you a strong foundation — but the decision should ultimately be made in consultation with Dr. Ae, who can assess your individual anatomy and advise which technique is genuinely better suited to you.

APS consultations are free and conducted online via Google Meet or WeChat. After the consultation, you will receive a written summary of the recommended technique and the reasoning behind it — so you can take your time, do further research, and make the decision that feels right for you.

There is no commitment required to book a consultation, and no pressure to proceed. Our goal is simply to give you the clearest possible picture of what is achievable for you specifically.

Ready to find out which technique is right for you?

Book a free online consultation with Dr. Ae. Send your photos and questions in advance — Dr. Ae will review your anatomy and give you a personalised recommendation before your consultation begins.