Testicular volume and fertility potential in men operated due to varicocele and testicular hypotrophy in adolescence

Cent European J Urol. 2013;66(1):56-9. doi: 10.5173/ceju.2013.01.art18. Epub 2013 Apr 26.

Abstract

Introduction: Failure to perform surgical repair of varicocele before puberty is among the common causes of male infertility. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the testicular volume and fertility potential in men after laparoscopic varicocelectomy conducted in adolescence due to varicocele and concomitant testicular hypotrophy.

Material and methods: From 1996 through 2011, eighty-two adolescents were operated on for unilateral primary varicocele with testicular hypotrophy. Sixty-eight patients were subject to the current analysis. The age of the patients was 13 to 17 years (mean 15.3 years). Clinical diagnosis was established on the basis of andrologic examination and ultrasonography with an assessment of testicular size and varicocele severity. Laparoscopic surgical repair was performed by a transperitoneal approach with division of testicular vein only.

Results: An increase in left testicular volume when compared with the contralateral testis was found in 25 (78.1%) young men with clinical grade 2 varicocele (p = 0.02) and in 32 (88.8%) subjects with grade 3 abnormality (p = 0.04). An increase in left testicular volume was found in 46 (85.1%) of 54 patients with unilateral varicocele and in 12 (85.7%) of 14 subjects operated on for bilateral disease. A left testicular volume increase was comparable independent of the use of uni- or bilateral repair. Fifty-eight (85.2%) of our 68 patients had normozoospermia.

Conclusions: Laparoscopic varicocele repair resulted in a significant increase of hypotrophic testicular volume in 83.8% of our subjects.

Keywords: laparoscopy; testicular hypotrophy; varicocele.