Search Results 1-10 of 14686 for Vas%2Bdeferens
Seal the vas deferens by tying it, using heat (cauterizing), surgical clips or a combination of methods. Then your doctor will return the ends of the vas ...
During the procedure, a surgeon reconnects each tube (vas deferens) that carries sperm from a testicle into the semen. After a successful vasectomy reversal, ...
First, what exactly is a vasectomy? Well, your tubes called the vas deferens, are the tubes that carry sperm from the testicles out to your urinary tract where ...
Surgical removal might damage the epididymis or the vas deferens, a tube that transports sperm from the epididymis to the penis. Damage to either can reduce ...
Sperm that are unable to travel through the tube that carries sperm from each testicle and is cut during vasectomy (vas deferens) may cause back pressure.
The vas deferens tubes carry sperm from the testicles to the semen. "We're essentially putting those two tubes back together that were initially cut for the ...
The second procedure, known as epididymovasostomy, is more complex. It involves attaching the vas deferens directly to the small organ at the back of each ...
... vas deferens, so that sperm can't get into the semen. Sometimes, due to a change in life circumstance, men decide they want to be able to father another ...
Pain often returns once the numbing medication wears off. Surgery. Removal of sperm granuloma. Some men develop a small ball of scar tissue on the vas deferens ...
Possible complications from surgical removal that might affect fertility include damage to the epididymis or to the tube that transports sperm (vas deferens).
Mayo Clinic does not endorse companies or products. Advertising revenue supports our not-for-profit mission.
Check out these best-sellers and special offers on books and newsletters from Mayo Clinic Press.
Thanks to generous benefactors, your gift today can have 5X the impact to advance AI innovation at Mayo Clinic.