Volume 18, Issue 2 (March 2016) 18, 171–178; DOI:10.4103/1008-682X.170866
The evolution and refinements of varicocele surgery
Joel L Marmar
Director of Men’s Health Services, Planned Parenthood of Southern New Jersey, 317 S. Broadway, Camden, NJ 08103, USA.
Correspondence: Dr. JL Marmar (joelmarmar2@gmail.com)
Abstract |
INTRODUCTION Varicoceles have been recognized as clinical entities for more than a century but, in the early years, the treatment was exclusively for the management of pain. After 1952, these lesions were viewed differently because Tulloch reported that varicoceles may affect male fertility.1 He performed a varicocelectomy on a man with azoospermia, sperm appeared in the ejaculate over time, and the patient achieved a pregnancy. In 1955, Tulloch reported his series of varicolectomies on 30 infertile men.2 Three had azoospermia, but the others had varying sperm densities. Although the study design was crude evaluated by today’s standards, the author concluded, “From the results obtained, it seems justifiable where a varicocele is associated with subfertility, the varicocele should be cured.”
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