EpididymitisFoundation.org

Home
Stop Wearing
Tight Pants
Cytokines May Diagnose Prostatitis
The Most Common Urinary Diseases in Men
Metastatic appendiceal adenocarcinoma
Epididymitis Introduction
Epididymitis and the Seminal Vesicles
CDC Guidelines
Epididymitis Foundation Blurbs
Praise for SPCWS
About UsAbout Dr. Bradley Hennenfent
Contact Us
Related Book
Books
Copyright
Links
Other Links
Chlamydia Foundation
Ejaculatory ductobstruction.org
Prostatitis And BPH

Surviving Prostate Cancer Without Surgery.org
Urethritis.org
Varicocele Foundation
Vasectomy Foundation
Prostatitis.org
How we made this site
Macromedia
Textpad
Photoshop
Corel
Wsftp Pro
Contact Dr. Bradley Hennenfent



Role of fine needle aspiration cytology in nonneoplastic testicular and scrotal lesions and male infertility.

Links Role of fine needle aspiration cytology in nonneoplastic testicular and scrotal lesions and male infertility. Handa U, Bhutani A, Mohan H, Bawa AS

Acta Cytol. 2006 Sep-Oct;50(5):513-7. Links Role of fine needle aspiration cytology in nonneoplastic testicular and scrotal lesions and male infertility. Handa U, Bhutani A, Mohan H, Bawa AS. Department of Pathology and Surgery, Government Medical College and Hospital, Chandigarh, India. OBJECTIVE: To study the role of fine needle aspiration (FNA) in male infertility and in nonneoplastic lesions of the testis and scrotum. STUDY DESIGN: In a retrospective study over a 5-year period, 164 cases of FNA of testicular and scrotal nonneoplastic lesions were retrieved. Aspiration was performed with a 23-gauge needle on a 20-mL syringe. RESULTS: Of 164 cases, 27 (16%) remained inconclusive; they were mainly from epididymal lesions. The remaining 137 cases were categorized as inflammatory lesions, 52 (31.7%); noninflammatory lesions, 42 (25.6%); and infertility cases, 43 (26.2%). Among the inflammatory lesions, 33 cases had nonspecific inflammation, 13 had granulomatous epididymoorchitis, 3 cases were of spermatic granuloma, and 3 cases revealed microfilariae. Noninflammatory lesions included 25 cases of spermatocele, 8 of hematoma/torsion, 5 of hydrocele, 3 of benign epididymal cyst and 1 of calcinosis cutis. Among the patients investigated for infertility, 23 (53%) had normal spermatogenesis, 6 (14%) had Sertoli cells only, 5 (119%) had maturation arrest, 6 (14%) showed hypospermatogenesis, and 3 (7%) showed an atrophic pattern. CONCLUSION: FNA of the testis and scrotum is a simple, quick, minimally invasive and painless outpatient procedure. The sample obtained is more representative than biopsy as several separate punctures can be made, and there is no local scarring. PMID: 17017436 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE] Related Links Scrotal ultrasound in male infertility. [Eur Urol. 1989] PMID: 2687000 Clinical value of cell counts and indices in testicular fine needle aspiration cytology in primary infertility: diagnostic performance compared with histology. [Anal Quant Cytol Histol. 2006] PMID: 17220146 Ultrasound evaluation of scrotum in pediatrics. [Urology. 1986] PMID: 3510501 Testicular fine needle aspiration cytology in male infertility. [Acta Cytol. 2006] PMID: 16610681 Ultrasonic evaluation of the scrotum. [Urol Radiol. 1979] PMID: 554367 See all Related Articles... Display Summary Brief Abstract AbstractPlus Citation MEDLINE XML UI List LinkOut ASN.1 Related Articles Cited Articles Cited in Books CancerChrom Links Domain Links 3D Domain Links GEO DataSet Links Gene Links Gene (GeneRIF) Links Genome Links Project Links GENSAT Links GEO Profile Links HomoloGene Links Nucleotide Links Nucleotide (RefSeq) Links OMIA Links OMIM (calculated) Links OMIM (cited) Links BioAssay Links Compound Links Compound via MeSH Substance Links Substance via MeSH PMC Links Cited in PMC PopSet Links Probe Links Protein Links Protein (RefSeq) Links SNP Links Structure Links Taxonomy via GenBank UniGene Links UniSTS Links Show 5 10 20 50 100 200 500 Sort by Pub Date First Author Last Author Journal Send to Text File Printer Clipboard E-mail Order .

Department of Pathology and Surgery, Government Medical College and Hospital, Chandigarh, India.


OBJECTIVE: To study the role of fine needle aspiration (FNA) in male infertility and in nonneoplastic lesions of the testis and scrotum. STUDY DESIGN: In a retrospective study over a 5-year period, 164 cases of FNA of testicular and scrotal nonneoplastic lesions were retrieved. Aspiration was performed with a 23-gauge needle on a 20-mL syringe. RESULTS: Of 164 cases, 27 (16%) remained inconclusive; they were mainly from epididymal lesions. The remaining 137 cases were categorized as inflammatory lesions, 52 (31.7%); noninflammatory lesions, 42 (25.6%); and infertility cases, 43 (26.2%). Among the inflammatory lesions, 33 cases had nonspecific inflammation, 13 had granulomatous epididymoorchitis, 3 cases were of spermatic granuloma, and 3 cases revealed microfilariae. Noninflammatory lesions included 25 cases of spermatocele, 8 of hematoma/torsion, 5 of hydrocele, 3 of benign epididymal cyst and 1 of calcinosis cutis. Among the patients investigated for infertility, 23 (53%) had normal spermatogenesis, 6 (14%) had Sertoli cells only, 5 (119%) had maturation arrest, 6 (14%) showed hypospermatogenesis, and 3 (7%) showed an atrophic pattern. CONCLUSION: FNA of the testis and scrotum is a simple, quick, minimally invasive and painless outpatient procedure. The sample obtained is more representative than biopsy as several separate punctures can be made, and there is no local scarring.




Previous Abstract  Reference new to old  Next Abstract





This abstract is being posted for educational purposes, as well as for comment and criticism, by the visitors to the Epididymitis Foundation website (www.EpididymitisFoundation.org). This abstract is representative of a larger article that is indexed on Medline.

  

Men's Health Web Ring

    SurvivingProstateCancer
      WithoutSurgery.org


  VasectomyFoundation.org


   Prostatitis Foundation
    ( Prostatitis.org)


Disclaimer: Information provided on this web site is for educatonal purposes only. It is not a substitute for, nor can it replace advice from your own physician. The information on this site is not to be used for diagnosing or treating any health concerns that you may have. Testicular torsion, which is a medical emergency can be confused with epididymitis. You must see your own physician for diagnosis and treatment. Furthermore, the information on this site is never guaranteed to be 100% accurate or 100% up to date. All the side effects of mentioned treatments, drugs, surgeries, or therapies cannot always be listed or be known. Errors and omissions may occur in any essay. See a competent physician for your health care needs.
EpididymitisFoundation.org™ Established December 11, 2002






Created By Urban Twilight Studios