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Urinary Incontinence — Assessment & Treatment

Urinary incontinence is common, treatable, and — crucially — not something women simply have to accept. Mr. Jesuraj provides specialist assessment, conservative treatment, surgical options, and careful referral to a urogynaecologist where needed. Treatment is always matched to the individual.

15%

of all men have a varicocele

35%

of men with infertility have a varicocele

60–70%

improvement in semen parameters after repair

#1

most common correctable cause of male infertility

What Is a Varicocele?

A varicocele is an abnormal dilatation of the veins (pampiniform plexus) that drain blood from the testicle — essentially varicose veins within the scrotum. They are far more common on the left side (85–90% of cases) due to the anatomical difference in how the left testicular vein drains, but can be bilateral.
Varicoceles are found in approximately 15% of all men — but in up to 35% of men presenting with primary infertility and up to 80% of men with secondary infertility (those who have fathered a child before). This dramatic increase in prevalence among infertile men strongly suggests a causal relationship.
The mechanism of infertility is not fully understood but is thought to involve raised scrotal temperature, disrupted blood flow to the testis, oxidative stress, and hormonal effects — all of which impair spermatogenesis. Importantly, repair of the varicocele reverses these effects in many men, leading to measurable improvements in semen quality.

SIGNS & SYMPTOMS

Abnormal semen analysis

Low sperm count, poor motility or abnormal morphology — often the first sign.

Scrotal aching or heaviness

Dull discomfort that worsens when standing, exercising or at the end of the day — relieves when lying down.

Visible or palpable veins

A “bag of worms” sensation above the testicle — more obvious when standing or after a Valsalva manoeuvre.

Testicular atrophy

The affected testicle may be smaller than the other — a sign of impaired function that reversal can improve.

Often asymptomatic

Many varicoceles cause no pain and are found only during infertility investigation or routine examination.

How We Assess Urinary Incontinence

Accurate assessment is the cornerstone of good incontinence management — the treatment depends entirely on the correct diagnosis.

SUBCLINICAL

Detected on Doppler Only

Not palpable or visible on examination — detected only by scrotal Doppler ultrasound. Clinical significance in infertility is debated. Surgery generally not recommended for subclinical varicocele alone.

GRADE I

Palpable on Valsalva Only

Felt only when the patient performs a Valsalva manoeuvre (straining/bearing down). Not visible. Mild varicocele — treatment depends on clinical context and semen analysis findings.

GRADE II

Palpable Without Valsalva

Readily felt on standing examination without straining. Moderate varicocele — associated with significantly impaired semen parameters in many men. Treatment typically recommended when fertility is affected.

GRADE III

Visible Through the Skin

Large varicocele visible on inspection — the classic “bag of worms.” Strongly associated with impaired semen analysis and testicular atrophy. Treatment recommended in most cases.

TREATMENT OPTIONS

The Full Range of Varicocele Treatments

Treatment choice depends on the grade, symptoms, fertility goals, and individual anatomy. Mr. Jesuraj offers all options and advises on the most appropriate approach for each patient.

Subinguinal Microsurgical Varicocelectomy

The gold standard — lowest recurrence rate, lowest complication rate

★ GOLD STANDARD

  • Hydrocele formation (10–30% non-microsurgical vs <1% microsurgical)
  • Testicular artery injury and testicular atrophy
  • Varicocele recurrence (15–20% vs <5% microsurgical)
APPROACH

Subinguinal (below groin crease)

MAGNIFICATION

Zeiss microscope 15–25x

ANAESTHETIC

Local or general anaesthetic

DURATION

45–90 min (bilateral: longer)

SETTING

Day case

RECURRENCE RATE

<5% (vs 15–20% non-microsurgical)

HYDROCELE RATE

<1% (vs 10–30% non-microsurgical)

RECOVERY

1–2 weeks

SEMEN REASSESSMENT

At 3 and 6 months post-op

Inguinal Varicocelectomy (Ivanissevich Procedure)

Open surgical ligation through the groin — an alternative when microsurgery is not required

STANDARD SURGICAL OPTION

APPROACH

Inguinal (groin) incision

ANAESTHETIC

General anaesthetic

DURATION

30–60 minutes

SETTING

Day case

RECURRENCE

Higher than microsurgical

RECOVERY

1–2 weeks

Radiological Embolisation

Minimally invasive — blocking the vein via a catheter under X-ray guidance

NON-SURGICAL OPTION

PERFORMED BY

Interventional radiologist

ANAESTHETIC

Local anaesthetic + sedation

RECOVERY

1–2 days

RECURRENCE

Higher than microsurgical

BEST FOR

Recurrent varicocele after surgery

Laparoscopic Varicocelectomy (Palomo Procedure)

Keyhole surgery through the abdomen — rarely recommended in current practice

RARELY RECOMMENDED

APPROACH

Transabdominal keyhole

ANAESTHETIC

General anaesthetic

LIMITATIONS

No microsurgical magnification

CURRENT ROLE

Largely superseded by microsurgery

EXPECTED OUTCOMES

What to Expect After Varicocele Repair

Results depend on the grade of varicocele, baseline semen parameters, patient age and partner fertility — assessed individually during consultation.

60–70%
Improvement in Semen Parameters

Significant improvement in sperm count, motility or morphology — typically seen at 3–6 months post-operatively as new sperm mature.

35–40%
Spontaneous Pregnancy Rate

Natural pregnancy in couples with no other identified fertility factor — often achieved within 12 months of surgery.

3–6 months
Time to See Results

Spermatogenesis takes approximately 72 days — improvement in semen analysis is typically seen at the 3-month recheck, with further gains by 6 months.

>70%
Reduction in Scrotal Pain

For men with symptomatic varicocele (aching, heaviness) — significant pain improvement is reported in the majority of patients.

YOUR JOURNEY

From Diagnosis to Recovery

01
Assessment

Consultation, examination and scrotal Doppler ultrasound. Semen analysis if fertility is the concern. Grade and clinical significance assessed.

02
Treatment Decision

Full discussion of all options — microsurgical repair, embolisation, or watchful waiting. Decision made together based on your goals and anatomy.

03
Surgery

Day case procedure. Mr. Jesuraj performs microsurgical repair under the Zeiss microscope. Home same day — rest for 1–2 weeks.

04
Semen Recheck

Semen analysis at 3 and 6 months. Results reviewed with Mr. Jesuraj. Further planning if needed — including IVF if parameters remain poor.

Interested?

Book a consultation with Mr. Jesuraj to find out if you are a suitable candidate. Appointments available within days.