Recent developments in vasectomy
TL;DR: Vasectomy is one of the safest and most effective permanent contraceptive methods available and although vasectomy has traditionally been thought to have overall failure rates of 1-3% or lower, recent research indicates higher failure rates for ligation and excision.
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Abstract: Vasectomy is one of the safest and most effective permanent contraceptive methods available. Compared with tubal ligation, which is usually done under general anaesthesia and entails surgery within a woman's peritoneal cavity, vasectomy is safer and men recover more quickly from the procedure. Vasectomies are usually done under local anaesthesia in outpatient settings, and men usually go home within an hour of the surgery. None the less, for various reasons, vasectomy procedures are less common than tubal ligation procedures in most countries.
Surgical techniques used for vasectomy vary widely throughout the world. The two main components of vasectomy are isolation of the vas deferens from the scrotum and subsequent vas occlusion. However, more than 30 different combinations of vas occlusion techniques probably exist,1 and poor quality studies, heterogeneous study designs, and conflicting results have made it difficult to determine which are the most effective.2
The most common technique, especially in low resource settings, is suture ligation with excision of a small segment of the vas.3 Few data are available on exact rates of use, but recent observations and interviews with surgeons in Asia suggest that at least 95% of all vasectomies in India, Nepal, and Bangladesh are done using ligation and excision (Michel Labrecque, Laval University, written communication, 28 May 2004). In contrast, data from 1995 indicate that only about 18% of vasectomies in the United States are done using this technique.4 Although vasectomy has traditionally been thought to have overall failure rates of 1-3% or lower,5–7 recent research indicates higher failure rates for ligation and excision.8–10
Because of a concern that vasectomy failure rates with ligation and excision could be higher than generally acknowledged, Family Health International and EngenderHealth convened a meeting of vasectomy experts in April 2001 in …
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Citations
Vasectomy: the other (better) form of sterilization.
TL;DR: An overview of vasectomy use and techniques is provided, and reasons for the disparity in vasectomy utilization in the United States are explored.
106
The incidence of chronic scrotal pain after vasectomy: a prospective audit
TL;DR: To assess the extent of scrotal pain in men before and after vasectomy, to produce accurate data for the benefit of men considering this procedure, and hence improved informed consent about the outcomes, is a poorly quantified clinical problem.
Risks and Complications of Vasectomy
Christopher E. Adams,Moshe Wald +1 more
TL;DR: Despite myriad vasectomy techniques, failure rates are less than those seen with tubal ligation and available data suggest that vasectomized men do not seem at increased risk for immune-complex diseases.
81
Factors Affecting Vasectomy Acceptability in Tanzania
Arwen Bunce,Greg Guest,Hannah Searing,Veronica Frajzyngier,Peter Riwa,Joseph Kanama,Isaac Achwal +6 more
TL;DR: Six themes emerged as overarching factors contributing to the vasectomy decision-making process: economics, spousal influence, religion, provider reputation and availability, uncertainty about the future, and poor vasectomy knowledge and understanding.
“If you do vasectomy and come back here weak, I will divorce you”: a qualitative study of community perceptions about vasectomy in Southern Ghana
Philip Baba Adongo,Placide Tapsoba,James F. Phillips,Philip Teg-Nefaah Tabong,Allison Stone,Emmanuel Kuffour,Selina F. Esantsi,Patricia Akweongo +7 more
TL;DR: Stigma and the misconceptions in the community may be accounting for the low vasectomy uptake in Ghana despite several advocacy strategies and calls for the need to increase health education to demystify the misconceptions about vasectomy.
References
Competing interests: none declared.
Laurence J Hirsch
- 01 Jan 2006
TL;DR: a Executive Director, Medical Communications, Merck Research Laboratories, 126 E. Lincoln Ave., Rahway, NJ 07065, USA (email: laurence_hirsch@merck.com).
Vasectomy surgical techniques: a systematic review
TL;DR: Current evidence supports no-scalpel vasectomy as the safest surgical approach to isolate the vas when performing vasectomy andOcclusive effectiveness appears to be further improved by combining FI with cautery, and fascial interposition increases effectiveness beyond ligation and excision alone.
100
Testicular pain following vasectomy: a review of postvasectomy pain syndrome.
TL;DR: Although the mechanism has not been proven, a number of studies have shown changes in the histology of the epididymis and the testis following vasectomy, which begin to explain the development of postvasectomy pain syndrome.
82
Vasectomy--safe and simple.
Liskin L,Pile Jm,Quillan Wf +2 more
- 01 Jan 1983
TL;DR: This review on vasectomy examines operating methods effectiveness short- and longterm side effects prospects for reversal prevalence and program issues, and whether vasectomy should be considered a permanent method.
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