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vasectomy

 
(və-sĕk'tə-mē, vā-zĕk'-) pronunciation
n., pl., -mies.
Surgical removal of all or part of the vas deferens, usually as a means of sterilization.


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Severing of the vas deferens, which carries sperm from the testes to the prostate gland, to cause sterility or prevent infection. This relatively simple procedure, which can be performed in a doctor's office with local anesthetics, removes the ability to father children without affecting ability to achieve erection or orgasm. The vas is cut near its beginning, in the scrotum. The cut ends may be sealed off or left open. Reversal is more likely to succeed in the latter case; microsurgery has improved the success rate.

For more information on vasectomy, visit Britannica.com.

Vasectomy is the operation to sterilize the male by dividing the vas deferens on both sides, and thus to interrupt the passage of sperm.

Vasectomy has been known for some hundred years — the first operation performed specifically for the purpose of sterilization took place in Indiana in 1899. It was initially believed that by suppressing the sperm-making functions of the testes, an increase in the sex hormone could be brought about, producing improvements in physical health and sexual vigour. This led to its practice as a ‘rejuvenation’ operation, known as the ‘Steinach’ operation after the Viennese professor whose laboratory experiments led to this conclusion. The numbers of men who underwent this operation in the hopes of increasing their sexual powers cannot be known, but Kenneth Walker, the British expert in male sexual disorders, believed that ‘uncritical and unprincipled medical men’ widely exploited this belief during the 1920s. He himself was sceptical of its benefit in increasing sexual power, attributing any apparent improvement to suggestion.

As a means of contraception, the operation was also, of course, much easier to perform and less drastic than the equivalent operation on the female. However, in spite of the publicity the operation gained in connection with rejuvenation, for many years it was confused in both the lay and the medical mind with castration. The very legality of such a ‘mutilating operation’ was in question.

It increased in popularity as a method of contraception during the 1960s, particularly for couples who had completed their families and were reluctant for the wife to continue taking the Pill for an indefinite period. Unlike female sterilization, it tends to be the choice of couples who share responsibility for fertility control.

There are currently various different operative techniques but the method that is gaining popularity is the ‘no scalpel’ method invented by Professor Li Shungqiang of Sichuan Reproductive Health Institute, Chengdu, Sichuan, P R China, and worldwide this method is now the most commonly used. It is a very minimal technique using specially designed instruments which enable the vas to be divided through a small puncture wound; the ends are then separated by a bit of tissue. It is interesting to note that Professor Li started life as a neurosurgeon but during the cultural revolution he was redirected to work in family planning. Many lesser men would have become very depressed but he immediately set about devising new operations, culminating in his no scalpel technique. It has now been used on hundreds of thousands of men and probably no other living surgeon has influenced the lives of more men.

A question that is commonly asked is ‘Where do the sperm go after vasectomy?’ The sperm-producing cells are in the seminiferous tubules inside the testicle and sperm exit from the top of the testicle into a softer area, the epididymis. The epididymis to a certain extent acts as a filter, and abnormal sperm and debris associated with cell division are cleared from the ejaculate. After vasectomy the whole sperm production has to be absorbed through the epididymis: an exaggeration of its normal function. Seminal fluid continues to be produced normally by the prostate gland and seminal vesicles.

The effect on subsequent sex-life appears to be beneficial in the majority of cases, in spite of the concern often expressed that it may have a deleterious effect on virility (harking back to the old association with castration) — commonly, increased sexual satisfaction and libido has been reported (perhaps substantiating Steinach, or merely reflecting the release from fear of conception). However, this is more likely to occur when the man has deliberately chosen to undertake vasectomy, unlike the case of the Indian men who were persuaded into vasectomy, in return for portable radios, during a drive to reduce the population problem of the subcontinent.

In recent years there has been some concern about the safety of vasectomy. It has been shown that there is no association between vasectomy and heart attacks or vasectomy and testicular cancer, although there have been worries about both. There is still some concern about the association between vasectomy and prostate cancer, but it seems very likely that this apparent association is because of the introduction of new methods to diagnose prostate cancer, and the way statistics are collected, rather than any cause and effect.

Vasectomy is highly reliable provided that an additional method of contraception is employed during the first weeks following the operation, during which live sperm may still be present in the seminal fluid.

The major disadvantage is that it cannot readily be reversed: even with recent developments in microsurgery, the operation to reunite the severed vasa deferens reopens them in 80-90% of cases, but the success rate in terms of achieving pregnancy is at best only 50%. There have been attempts at temporary, reversible blocking or clipping of the tubes, but so far these have failed to achieve a degree of reliability in any way comparable with the permanent operation.

There is a very small late failure rate (approximately 1 in 2000), but vasectomy remains surer than female sterilization. The only more certain method of contraception is complete abstinence.

— Tim Hargreave, Lesley A. Hall

See also contraception; sterilization.

Columbia Encyclopedia:

vasectomy

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vasectomy, male sterilization by surgical excision of the vas deferens, the thin duct that carries sperm cells from the testicles to the prostate and the penis. Vasectomy is a popular method of birth control: in 1983, figures showed that approximately 10 million men had been sterilized in the U.S. since 1969. Excision of the vas deferens is a minor surgical procedure that can be performed in a physician's office in less than half an hour. A small incision is made on one side of the scrotum (the external sac housing the testes) and the vas deferens is located, cut, and the ends tied off. The incision is closed and the procedure is repeated on the other side. After surgery, it is necessary to wait until a negative sperm count is obtained before discarding other means of contraception, because viable sperm cells are retained in the seminal vesicles (the pair of storage pouches where sperm is mixed with other components of semen) and along the various sperm ducts. In addition it is usually advised that the patient be reexamined after a year, because the severed ends of the vas deferens occasionally reknit. Sterility resulting from vasectomy is considered to be permanent, and attempts at surgically reversing vasectomy, called vasovasotomy, have had limited success. In India, where the government is trying to stem the tide of overpopulation, money is paid to men who submit to voluntary vasectomy. Efforts to overcome the irreversibility of vasectomy have also led to experimentation with the implantation of faucetlike devices that can be made to open or close the sperm duct in a simple operation. Such devices have functioned successfully in animals but are still considered experimental in humans because of their unproved reversibility, high cost, and the degree of surgical skill needed to implant them. Another option suggested to those undergoing vasectomy is to preserve their fertility by depositing semen in sperm banks. Such semen samples are frozen in liquid nitrogen below −300°F (−185°F) and are considered to be viable for an indefinite period. However, there is considerable debate over the scientific and ethical aspects of sperm freezing, and the practice is still considered experimental. Researchers have examined the possible negative physiological effects of vasectomy, but there is no conclusive evidence that any link exists between the procedure and disease.

Bibliography

See S. D. Mumford, Vasectomy: The Decision-Making Process (1978); G. Denniston, Understanding Vasectomy (1978).


(vuh-sek-tuh-mee, vay-zek-tuh-mee)

A surgical procedure in which the ducts that carry sperm out of the testes are cut and tied off so that no sperm can pass. Vasectomy is a form of male sterilization and is used as a method of birth control. The procedure has no effect on a man's capacity to produce semen; the only difference is that his semen will no longer contain sperm.

Sign Language Videos:

vasectomy

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sign description: Both hands make a twisting and tieing motion in front of the abdomin.




Excision of the vas (ductus) deferens, or a portion of it; bilateral vasectomy results in sterility.

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categories related to 'vasectomy'

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Random House Word Menu by Stephen Glazier
For a list of words related to vasectomy, see:
  • Procedures - vasectomy: male sterilization procedure in which vas deferens that carries sperm from testes to urethra is surgically cut
  • Contraception and Fertility - vasectomy: surgical procedure for sterilizing men by cutting vas deferens


  See crossword solutions for the clue Vasectomy.
Translations:

Vasectomy

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Dansk (Danish)
n. - vasektomi

Nederlands (Dutch)
vasectomie, operatieve verwijdering van de zaadbuis

Français (French)
n. - vasectomie

Deutsch (German)
n. - (Med.) Vasektomie

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (ιατρ.) αγγειεκτομή

Italiano (Italian)
vasectomia

Português (Portuguese)
n. - vasectomia (f) (Med.)

Русский (Russian)
вазэктомия - иссечение части семявыводяшего протока

Español (Spanish)
n. - vasectomía

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - vasektomi

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
输精管切除术

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 輸精管切除術

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 정관 절제술

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 精管切除

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) قطع القناة الدافقه‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮ניתוח כריתת צינורית הזרע‬


 
 

 

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