Tash J A, Schlegel P N
James Buchanan Brady Urology Foundation, Department of Urology, The New York Presbyterian Hospital-Weill Medical College of Cornell University, The Population Council, Center for Biomedical Research, New York, New York, USA
Urology. 2001 Feb;57(2):334-7. doi: 10.1016/s0090-4295(00)00901-8.
Testicular sperm extraction (TESE) is a therapeutic technique that has revolutionized the treatment of severe male infertility presenting as nonobstructive azoospermia. However, the procedure is not without side effects, involving at least a transient effect on spermatogenesis. The purpose of this study was to demonstrate the histologic effects of TESE on the testicle.
Testicular biopsy specimens were analyzed from 7 patients with nonobstructive azoospermia who each underwent two consecutive TESE procedures. We evaluated two biopsies at the same site on the testicle so that we could examine the histologic effects of the first TESE procedure with the second biopsy specimen. First, a quantitative evaluation of seminiferous tubular volume was performed with a 121-point grid over multiple fields of the testicular specimen slides. The second step of the analysis involved a comparison of the number of germ cells per tubule in each set of specimens. Both Student's t test and Wilcoxon matched pairs tests were used for analysis.
In the first set of TESE specimens, tubules comprised 33,158 of 63,525 grid points, or 52.2% of the specimen area. This decreased to 28,637 points, or 45.1%, in the second set of specimens. This decrease in seminiferous tubular volume and corresponding increase in interstitial tissue was statistically significant (P <0.00042). Our data also showed a 5.5% decrease in the number of germ cells per 91 tubules in each data set (from 3222 to 2887, P = 0.25), which suggests a trend toward a lower number of germ cells per tubule.
These findings support our clinical observation that TESE causes a decrease in seminiferous tubular volume within the testicular parenchyma adjacent to the biopsy site. This reflects a potentially adverse local effect of TESE on the testis that may have important clinical consequences for men with nonobstructive azoospermia.
睾丸精子提取术(TESE)是一种治疗技术,它彻底改变了对表现为非梗阻性无精子症的严重男性不育症的治疗方法。然而,该手术并非没有副作用,至少对精子发生有短暂影响。本研究的目的是证明TESE对睾丸的组织学影响。
对7例非梗阻性无精子症患者的睾丸活检标本进行分析,每位患者均连续接受两次TESE手术。我们评估了睾丸同一部位的两次活检,以便能用第二次活检标本检查第一次TESE手术的组织学影响。首先,在睾丸标本玻片的多个视野上用121点网格对生精小管体积进行定量评估。分析的第二步涉及比较每组标本中每个小管的生殖细胞数量。采用学生t检验和威尔科克森配对检验进行分析。
在第一组TESE标本中,小管占63525个网格点中的33158个,即标本面积的52.2%。在第二组标本中,这一比例降至28637个点,即45.1%。生精小管体积的这种减少以及间质组织相应增加具有统计学意义(P<0.00042)。我们的数据还显示,每组数据中每91个小管的生殖细胞数量减少了5.5%(从3222个降至2887个,P=0.25),这表明每个小管的生殖细胞数量有减少的趋势。
这些发现支持了我们的临床观察,即TESE会导致活检部位附近睾丸实质内生精小管体积减小。这反映了TESE对睾丸潜在的不良局部影响,可能对非梗阻性无精子症男性产生重要的临床后果。