Treatment of male varicoceles by transcatheter ethanolamine oleate 5% foam sclerotherapy | ||||
The Egyptian Journal of Surgery | ||||
Volume 39, Issue 2, April 2020 PDF (1.32 MB) | ||||
DOI: 10.4103/ejs.ejs_231_19 | ||||
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Authors | ||||
Mohamed Ibrahim; Khalid Attala; Ah M.N. Qwashty | ||||
Abstract | ||||
Objective The authors report the experience with foam sclerotherapy with no additional coils, evaluating clinical success, patients’ satisfaction, and complications. Patients and methods The authors conducted a retrospective study of 71 patients with 76 varicoceles (mean age: 29.3 years; range: 13–60 years) who underwent foam sclerotherapy with ethanolamine oleate 5% (range: 2–12 ml) in an outpatient setting between October 2016 and September 2018. For the follow-up, interviews with the patients were conducted (mean follow-up time: 6.4 months, with SD: 5.17 months). Results The technical success rate was 84.2%. There was a 100% response rate to the patient interviews. Follow-up revealed a clinical success rate of 83.9% and a persistence or relapse rate of 16.1%. Of the patients, 85.9% were absolutely satisfied with the outcome. In 94.9% of cases, pain or discomfort resolution was reported, and in 97% of cases, aesthetic issues were no longer a problem. Of partners, 63.2% achieved pregnancy, and in 50% of patients with preprocedural testicular atrophy, catch-up growth was observed. One patient with pampiniform plexus phlebitis received inpatient treatment with no long-term damage recorded. Conclusion Ethanolamine oleate 5% foam varicocele sclerotherapy is a safe and effective procedure, with a high rate of patients’ satisfaction, clinical and technical success, and considerable catch-up growth and pregnancy achievement. | ||||
Keywords | ||||
ethanolamine oleate 5%; sclerotherapy; Varicocele | ||||
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