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Ultrasonography and colour Doppler flow in the testes of adult patients after treatment of cryptorchidism
Author(s) -
Taskinen S.,
Lehtinen A.,
Hovatta O.,
Wikström S.
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
british journal of urology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.773
H-Index - 148
eISSN - 1464-410X
pISSN - 0007-1331
DOI - 10.1046/j.1464-410x.1996.05818.x
Subject(s) - testicular artery , medicine , ultrasonography , infertility , parenchyma , incidence (geometry) , doppler sonography , radiology , pathology , artery , biology , pregnancy , genetics , physics , optics
Objective  To analyse the prevalence of post‐operative structural, parenchymal and vascular testicular abnormalities and the incidence of epididymal abnormalities in adult men treated for undescended testes in childhood. Patients and methods  The testes and epididymi of 76 adult men treated for cryptorchidism in childhood were evaluated 16 to 27 years after treatment, using colour Doppler ultrasonography. Results  The 61 spontaneously descended testes were significantly ( P <0.01) larger (mean [sd], 22 [8] mL) than the 90 undescended testes (13 [6] mL). The echo pattern in all the spontaneously descended testes was normal, whereas in 15 cases (17%) the testicular tissue was abnormal after cryptorchidism. In 12 of these 15 cases, the echo pattern was very irregular, and two other cases had microlithiasis of the testicular parenchyma, one of them bilaterally. No normal testicular artery was detected in two cases (3%) of normally descended testes, against 18 (20%) amongst those with undescended testes. Epididymal abnormalities were found in two (3%) of the group of normally descended testes against 32 (36%) in the undescended group. Conclusions  Infertility in patients with cryptorchidism may be a result not only of primary parenchymal degenerative changes of the testis directly due to the condition, but also of operative vascular trauma and epididymal anomalies. Operative trauma may be more common than has generally been believed. Ultrasonography is a suitable method to evaluate post‐operatively the prevalence of the testicular abnormalities analysed in the present study.

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