Microsurgical technique is safe and may improve SRR for TESE in a variety of patients with NOA, especially patients with heterogeneous testicular tubules.
We concluded that our formula should be useful for doctors considering microdissection testicular sperm extraction for patients with NOA because our equation uses noninvasive parameters without a preoperative testicular biopsy, which is a relatively invasive examination.
The "Japanese Clinical Guideline for Female Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms," published in Japan in November 2013, contains two algorithms (a primary and a specialized treatment algorithm) that are novel worldwide as they cover female lower urinary tract symptoms other than urinary incontinence. For primary treatment, necessary types of evaluation include querying the patient regarding symptoms and medical history, examining physical findings, and performing urinalysis. The types of evaluations that should be performed for select cases include evaluation with symptom/quality of life (QOL) questionnaires, urination records, residual urine measurement, urine cytology, urine culture, serum creatinine measurement, and ultrasonography. If the main symptoms are voiding/post-voiding, specialized treatment should be considered because multiple conditions may be involved. When storage difficulties are the main symptoms, the patient should be assessed using the primary algorithm. When conditions such as overactive bladder or stress incontinence are diagnosed and treatment is administered, but sufficient improvement is not achieved, the specialized algorithm should be considered. In case of specialized treatment, physiological re-evaluation, urinary tract/pelvic imaging evaluation, and urodynamic testing are conducted for conditions such as refractory overactive bladder and stress incontinence. There are two causes of voiding/post-voiding symptoms: lower urinary tract obstruction and detrusor underactivity. Lower urinary tract obstruction caused by pelvic organ prolapse may be improved by surgery.
OBJECTIVE
To determine the angiogenic profiles in the bladder of patients with bladder pain syndrome (BPS)/interstitial cystitis (IC), and to evaluate the relationship between these profiles and associated clinical features including pelvic pain and glomerulations.
PATIENTS AND METHODS
Angiogenesis and angiogenic components are important in chronic inflammatory disease. High levels of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) have been shown to induce immature angiogenesis, where microvessels have insufficient coverage of pericytes, resulting in haemorrhagic vessels. Biopsy specimens from 30 patients with BPS/IC and glomerulations, and 10 control patients, were examined immunohistochemically for VEGF expression, microvessel density (MVD) and immature microvessels. Pericyte coverage of microvessels in the specimens was used as an indicator of mature microvessels, and pericytes were identified by double‐immunohistochemistry for CD34 and α‐smooth muscle actin. The microvessel pericyte coverage index (MPI) was calculated as the ratio of mature vessels to total vessels. We also assessed the relationship between these angiogenic profiles and associated clinical features including pain and glomerulations.
RESULTS
VEGF expression in the lamina propria was significantly higher in BPS/IC than in control samples (50% vs 10%, P < 0.05). Among patients with BPS/IC, VEGF expression was significantly higher in those with severe pain than in those with mild pain (78% vs 38%, P < 0.05). The MPI was significantly lower in BPS/IC than in control samples (23% vs 35%, P < 0.05), whereas MVD did not differ significantly between BPS/IC and control samples.
CONCLUSIONS
There is increased VEGF and immature vascularization in patients with BPS/IC, and VEGF expression is associated with the degree of pain described by patients. Taken together, VEGF might contribute to pain and promote the formation of immature vessels in BPS/IC, and the increased immature vascularization might have a role in glomerulations in patients with BPS/IC.
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