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during lap exploration for intra abdominal UDT
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Quote from "The SAGES Manual of Pediatric Minimally Invasive Surgery" by Danielle S. Walsh, Todd A. Ponsky, Nicholas E. Bruns -
"If a one-stage procedure is chosen, carefully place cephalad traction on the testis to confirm that the epididymis and vas deferens do not loop into the inguinal canal, so that these are not injured during the following step. Identify and transect the gubernaculum testis to allow complete mobilization."Comment
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Quote from "The SAGES Manual of Pediatric Minimally Invasive Surgery" by Danielle S. Walsh, Todd A. Ponsky, Nicholas E. Bruns -
"If the testicle is so high that a Fowler-Stephens procedure seems inevitable, high division of the testicular pedicle before any peritoneal dissection with return to do the orchiopexy in a few months often allows the collaterals the best chance to develop via the artery of the vas and the cremasters."Comment
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Quote from "The SAGES Manual of Pediatric Minimally Invasive Surgery" by Danielle S. Walsh, Todd A. Ponsky, Nicholas E. Bruns -
"If the vas deferens ends blindly, with no testicle at its end, the gonad must still be sought by identifying the distal end of the testicular artery, usually very high in the abdomen. This gonad can be simply resected to remove the risk of malignant degeneration in a testicle which will have no spermatogenic function."Comment
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Quotes from "The SAGES Manual of Pediatric Minimally Invasive Surgery" by Danielle S. Walsh, Todd A. Ponsky, Nicholas E. Bruns -
"it is imperative to make an early decision on the likelihood of a successful one-stage procedure based on the intra-abdominal location of the testicle at laparoscopy."
Pediatric surgeons need to determine if treatment should be performed with one- or two-stage Fowler-Stephens orchiopexy at the initial laparoscopic inspection.Comment
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Quote from "ESPES Manual of Pediatric Minimally Invasive Surgery" by Ciro Esposito, François Becmeur, Henri Steyaert, Philipp Szavay -
"Testis, spermatic vessels, and vas deferens may not be found in laparoscopic exploration of the inguinal region. Intrapelvic or retrocolic testis might be present in such cases. If the bladder is full, first it is emptied, and if necessary Trendelenburg angle is increased to expose an intrapelvic testis hidden behind the bladder. If the testis is not found in rectovesical pouch, the retroperitoneum from the internal inguinal ring up to the lower pole of the kidney should be examined because the testis might be found anywhere along that tract."Comment
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Quote from "ESPES Manual of Pediatric Minimally Invasive Surgery" by Ciro Esposito, François Becmeur, Henri Steyaert, Philipp Szavay -
"Failure of testicular development also called as testicular agenesis can occur in early or late developmental phase (Fig. 74.3). Early-onset testicular agenesis results in the absence of the testis, spermatic vessels, and Wolffian structures. In later failure, testosterone is produced locally and induces development of Wolffian structures, so that the vas is observed in a late-onset testicular agenesis."
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