The authors evaluated a magnetic resonance (MR) imaging-compatible biopsy device comprising a needle guide that can be visualized with MR imaging and manipulated mechanically from outside the MR unit. With approval from the local ethics committee and patient consent, this device was tested in 12 patients by using a closed 1.5-T MR unit and a body phased-array coil. Patients had elevated prostate-specific antigen levels (6-60 ng/mL) and one or more areas in the prostate that were suspicious for carcinoma at prebiopsy MR imaging. Biopsy was performed with transrectal access and with the patient prone. A 16-gauge MR imaging-compatible needle was successfully positioned with the device, and between six and nine tissue cores were obtained in each patient. In one patient, two suspicious basal areas could not be reached with the device. Histologic analysis showed prostate cancer in five patients and prostatitis in six. No complications were observed. The device enabled MR imaging-guided core-needle biopsy of prostate areas suspicious for cancer on MR images.
The seminal plasma components neutral alpha-glucosidase, carnitine, fructose, citrate, and polymorphonuclear granulocyte (PMN) elastase in 253 men were determined. The seminal plasma of 221 infertile men, a control group with proved fertility and 13 patients after vasectomy were investigated. The concentrations of free carnitine (212 versus 521 micromol/l, n = 219, P < 0.001), total carnitine (437 versus 743 micromol/l, n = 219, P < 0.001), and the activity of neutral alpha-glucosidase (15.1 versus 23.4 IU/l, n = 236, P < 0.05) were significantly reduced in the infertile patient group as compared to the fertile control group, the concentration of PMN elastase (102 versus 48 microg/l, n = 234, P < 0.05) being significantly increased in the infertile patients. In the patients after vasectomy the activity of neutral alpha-glucosidase was the only epididymal marker that was significantly reduced (4.3 versus 9. 8 IU/l, n = 35, P = 0.002) in comparison with the patients with testicular azoospermia. At a limit of 6 IU/l the sensitivity of the method was 92% and the specificity was 72%. Altogether, the epididymal markers were reduced in subfertile patients compared with the control group. For the differential diagnosis of azoospermia only the determination of the neutral alpha-glucosidase activity is useful.
The worldwide prevalence of tuberculosis is still high and has remained almost unchanged over the past century as a result of increasing incidence in countries of the Third World. Twenty per cent of patients with tuberculosis will develop an extrapulmonary manifestation over time, the most common site being the genitourinary tract. The patient's history can lead to the sometimes difficult diagnosis. Radiological imaging helps in depicting genitourinary tuberculosis. However, the diagnosis of genitourinary tuberculosis is made on the basis of culture studies and is supported by polymerase chain reaction. The latter has impressive sensitivity and specificity, but lacks the ability to determine biological activity. The combination of three or four anti-tuberculosis drugs over a course of 6 to 9 months remains the treatment of choice. Drug resistance is increasing and necessitates tight therapy control. Tuberculosis of the male seminal duct may be an important cause of male infertility as a result of multiple epididymidal scarring. In these cases testicular sperm extraction is the method of choice for sperm retrieval. The outcome of sperm retrieval followed by intracytoplasmatic sperm injection is not affected.
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