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Comparative Study
. 1994 Oct;62(4):869-75.
doi: 10.1016/s0015-0282(16)57018-6.

The venous anatomy of experimental left varicocele: comparison with naturally occurring left varicocele in the human

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Free article
Comparative Study

The venous anatomy of experimental left varicocele: comparison with naturally occurring left varicocele in the human

T T Turner et al. Fertil Steril. 1994 Oct.
Free article

Abstract

Objective: To determine the effect of experimental left varicocele on the anatomy of the veins serving the rat testis and to compare that anatomy to known patterns of vascular drainage from the human testis with and without varicocele.

Design: Vascular maps were made of the effluent vessels from the rat testis in control animals and those with a 30-day experimental left varicocele. Consensus maps were arrived at and these were compared to published reports of the pertinent venous anatomy in humans with and without varicocele.

Setting: Research laboratory.

Results: The major route of blood leaving the rat testis was confirmed to be the spermatic vein, but nine common collaterals were also found to exist. Four of these collaterals became more pronounced with experimental varicocele as did several dilated perineal veins. These latter vessels all led to the iliac vein. The vasculature of the rat experimental varicocele model shares some important anatomical features with human varicocele anatomy.

Conclusions: Varicocele in humans and in the rat model causes a redistribution of blood flow from a route primarily out the spermatic vein to routes leading to the iliac vein. The redistribution is similar but not identical.

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