A total of 130 men presenting with oligospermia and clinically identifiable scrotal varicoceles was evaluated, treated surgically and followed for 1 year for pregnancy rate. The treatment outcome was compared to an age-matched cohort of 83 oligospermic men who had received empirical medical therapy with clomiphene citrate (25 mg. per day) for the same 1-year interval. This study was done to contrast treatment modalities in infertility and not as a strict control. Only eugonadotropic patients in both groups were used for comparison. In the varicocele group the over-all pregnancy rate was 38.5 per cent. Four variables (a lack of testicular atrophy, sperm density greater than 50 million per ejaculate, sperm motility 60 per cent or more and serum follicle-stimulating hormone values less than 300 ng. per ml.) proved to be accurate preoperative predictors of postoperative pregnancy success. Four other variables (varicocele size and laterality, sperm forward progression greater than 2 and normal sperm morphology 60 per cent or more) did not yield statistically significant rates of improvement in pregnancy postoperatively. The pregnancy rate of the eugonadotropic patients undergoing varicocele repair was 45.8 per cent. Despite statistical similarity in patient age, sperm density and mean gonadotropin levels the medically treated patients had a pregnancy rate of only 25.5 per cent, significantly lower than the surgically treated patients. In summary, patients with an identifiable varicocele had a greater chance of achieving a pregnancy following surgical correction than did those treated with empirical drug therapy. In addition, certain preoperative variables in the physical and laboratory analyses appeared to portend a greater surgical response.
The binding of the glycosaminoglycan [3H] heparin to bull spermatozoa was compared with nonreturn rates of dairy bulls. Semen samples from five bulls above and five below an average 71% nonreturn rate were used. Samples consisted of first and second ejaculates on a single day collected 1 d/wk for up to 5 consecutive wk. Saturation binding assays using [3H] heparin were performed to quantitate the binding characteristics of each sample. Scatchard plot analyses indicated a significant difference in the binding affinity for [3H] heparin between bulls of high and low fertility. Dissociation constants were 69.0 and 119.3 pmol for bulls of high and low fertility, respectively. In contrast, the number of binding sites for [3H] heparin did not differ significantly among bulls. Differences in binding affinity of [3H] heparin to bull sperm might be used to predict relative fertility of dairy bulls.
A group of 11 patients, 2 female and 9 male, underwent total bladder replacement using the ileocolonic segment (LeBag technique) with anastomosis of the bowel to the urethra. The diagnosis was invasive bladder cancer in 10 patients and severe intractable interstitial cystitis in 1. The surgical technique in the male patients was modified to simplify the procedure. The 2 female patients underwent insertion of an artificial sphincter around the bowel segment for a continence mechanism. One patient died 6 weeks post-operatively from a severe coagulopathy. Five of the 9 male patients are continent day and night, relying on their own residual sphincter mechanism, but the remaining 4 required insertion of the artificial urinary sphincter to achieve social continence. The surviving female patient is totally continent. All patients have voiding intervals of 4 to 6 h during the day and are thus continent both day and night, but in some cases the artificial sphincter was necessary to achieve this. Loss of the normal bladder-sphincter reflexes following cystectomy may account for the high incidence of nocturnal incontinence observed in most series. Total bladder replacement is now possible in both male and female patients, thus avoiding an abdominal stoma.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.