A vatic ocelot on the right side can only suggest that something is compressing the vena cava, such as a thrombosis (a clot of the blood vessel) or a tumor (cancer may be).
A vatic ocelot is usually painless, but depending on volume, can cause pain.
Today, the vary cockle is recognized as a cause of male infertility (men cannot impregnate their women), accounting for almost 40% of the adult population cases
Na occurs in 15% of men with asymptomatic. Diagnosis of vat icicle can be made by physical examination by maneuvers which increase abdominal pressure (like coughing, defecation force) causing the veins to swell and the physician can palpate these veins.
To confirm the diagnosis called Eco Doppler examination, in which you can check if there really is reflux of blood should be done, and be able to measure the intensity of reflux.
Treatment of vary cockle is surgical. In surgery, "close up" the veins of testicular venous plexus, curing vary cockle.
However, this operation may have as a complication in 15% of cases the call hydromel disease in which water accumulates in the scrotum and depending on the size or sclerosis is treated by surgery.
Surgery should be done in some cases, as described below:
Vary cockles in pre-adolescents: it is not possible to assess the damage of the disease on fertility; testicular atrophy: degeneration of the testicle on the affected side only; constant changes in spermatozoa: cells Men responsible for getting pregnant. It is important to remember that if operated infertile men, fertility is obtained in 30% of patients achieving a pregnancy rate of 30-40% with birth rates around 20%.
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