F. Hadziselimovic et al., THE CHANCE FOR FERTILITY IN ADOLESCENT BOYS AFTER CORRECTIVE SURGERY FOR VARICOCELE, The Journal of urology, 154(2), 1995, pp. 731-733
We estimated the efficacy of a surgical procedure in adolescent patien
ts with varicocele and left testicular atrophy. A total of 25 young me
n (mean age 23.6 years) had a complete andrological followup for 10 ye
ars after successful ligation of the spermatic vein (according to Ivan
issevich) to correct left varicocele and testicular atrophy. Levels of
follicle-stimulating hormone, luteinizing hormone and testosterone in
the plasma were normal in all cases. Patients were characterized into
2 distinct groups: group A-11 patients with asthenoteratospermia and
group B-14 with a normal spermiogram. There was a significant differen
ce between groups A and B in the number of sperm per ejaculate (32 x 1
0(6) in A and 234.9 x 10(6) in B, p < 0.001). Preoperatively there was
no difference between these 2 groups regarding testicular atrophy of
the left compared to the right testis (87% in A and 86.4% in B) and th
e comparative testicular histology of biopsies since the number of Ad
spermatogonia per tubule was considerably reduced in all patients (rig
ht side 0.68 +/- 0.71 and left side 0.38 +/- 0.39 in A, and right side
0.15 +/- 0.17 and left side 0.14 +/- 0.11 in B). In both groups there
was no distinguishable difference in the degree of atrophy of seminif
erous tubules or Leydig cells in both testes, or patient age at surger
y (mean 13.3 years in A and 12.8 years in B). While the left testis of
patients in group B caught up in size to the contralateral testis, th
e left testicular volume in patients in group A was; only 80% of the r
ight testicular volume (p < 0.03, the Fisher test). One patient from g
roup B required a second surgical procedure because of a relapse. Pers
istent atrophy of the left testis in group A indicates that some patie
nts benefit suboptimally from the conventional surgical procedure.