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The study of detecting sperm in testis biopsy in men with severe oligospermia and azoospermia by two methods of wet prep cytologic and classic histopathologic

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TLDR
It seems that wet prep cytological examination is more reliable than permanent histopathologic sections in detecting sperm in testis biopsy of azoospermic men.
Abstract
Background: Many azoospermic patients with non obstructive azoospermia (NOA) are candidate for testicular sperm extraction (TESE) and in vitro fertilization. Because sperm might be present in some but not all parts of the testes of such men, multiple sampling of testicular tissue are usually necessary to increase the probability of sperm finding. Sperm finding can be done by two methods: 1) classic histopathology and 2) wet smear. Objective: Comparative study of pathology and wet smear methods for discovering sperm in testis biopsy of azoospermic men. Materials and Methods: We prospectively studied 67 consecutive infertile men who referred to Fatemieh Hospital, Hamedan, Iran between April 2002 and September 2004. All patients were either azoospermic or severely oligozoospermic. They underwent intraoperative wet prep cytological examinations of testis biopsy material and then specimens were permanently fixed for pathologic examination too. Results: Among the 67 testes that underwent wet prep cytological examination, 44 (65.7%) were positive and 23 (34.3%) had no sperm in their wet smear. On the permanent pathologic sections, 19 (28.4%) were positive and 48 (71.6%) cases were with no sperm in their sections. Among all the individuals 18 (26.8%) were negative in both studies, while 14 (20.8%) had minimum 1 sperm in their smears in both examinations. The positive cases in wet prep cytological examination were significantly more than the cases in the permanent histopathologic sections (p-value=0.000). Conclusion: It seems that wet prep cytological examination is more reliable than permanent histopathologic sections in detecting sperm in testis biopsy of azoospermic men.

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Citations
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Congenital absence of the vas deferens. The fertilizing capacity of human epididymal sperm

TL;DR: Sperm from the proximal caput epididymidis and even sperm from the vasa efferentia can fertilize the human oocyte in vitro and result in pregnancy with live birth.
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Testicular Fine Needle Aspiration Cytology versus Open Biopsy in the Evaluation of Azoospermic Men

TL;DR: Testicular FNAC is a simple and minimally invasive alternative method to open testicular biopsy in the investigation and assessment of patients with azoospermia.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Distribution of spermatogenesis in the testicles of azoospermic men: the presence or absence of spermatids in the testes of men with germinal failure

TL;DR: The study suggests that 4-6 mature spermatids/tubule must be present in the testis biopsy for any spermatozoa to reach the ejaculate, and suggests that massive testicular sampling from many different regions of the testes may not be necessary for successful TESE-ICSI.
Journal ArticleDOI

Congenital absence of the vas deferens. The fertilizing capacity of human epididymal sperm.

TL;DR: This work attempted to determine whether human sperm that had never passed through the epididymis could fertilize eggs in vitro and whether the technique could be used for men with congenital absence of the vas deferens.
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Multiple testicular sampling in non-obstructive azoospermia--is it necessary?

TL;DR: Whether the performance of multiple, rather than a single testicular sample contributes to obtaining spermatozoa in amounts sufficient for fertilization and cryopreservation in non-obstructive, azoospermic patients is investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Motile sperm in human testis biopsy specimens

TL;DR: All 18 testes with motile sperm found on wet prep were obstructed, and when any complete sperm with tail is found in a testis biopsy wet prep, obstruction is likely and immediate exploration and reconstructive surgery can be justified.
Journal ArticleDOI

In defense of a function for the human epididymis.

TL;DR: The evidence supports neither the view that testicular sperm are inherently fertile nor that a simple aging of sperm cells is sufficient for the fertilizing potential of spermatozoa to be realized, and emphasizes the importance of the environment to which the sperm cells are subjected.
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