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Varicocele
Most men with a varicocele never notice it — a tangle of swollen veins above the testicle, the classic "bag of worms" a doctor feels through the scrotum. About 1 in 7 men have one. But it's also the most common correctable cause of male infertility, it can quietly drop testosterone, and in adolescents it can stunt the affected testicle if left alone.
Decide · As-needed Evidence Emerging თავი ჯანდაცვა

If you're trying to conceive and your semen analysis is abnormal, a palpable varicocele is one of the few correctable male-factor causes worth taking seriously — in the right patient, repair roughly doubles the spontaneous pregnancy rate over a year. If you have one and you're not trying to conceive, have no pain, and your testicles are normal-sized, observation is usually the answer. The procedure itself — microsurgery in expert hands, or a same-day catheter from a vein in your groin — is genuinely low-complication these days. The honest catch: the pregnancy data are real but heterogeneous, and most men with a varicocele do not need anything done about it.

The veins draining your testicle normally do two jobs: they carry blood back up to the body, and they cool the artery feeding the testicle on the way down — a built-in radiator that keeps the testicle a couple of degrees below body temperature, which is what sperm production needs. In a varicocele, the one-way valves in those veins fail. Warm blood from the abdomen starts pooling backwards into the network of small veins above the testicle (the pampiniform plexus). The veins balloon out, and you can feel the result through the scrotum.

Almost all varicoceles — 8 or 9 out of 10 — happen on the left side, for a plumbing reason. The left testicular vein takes a longer path and joins the kidney's vein at a sharp 90° angle, while the right vein empties more directly into the body's main vein. The left one is also vulnerable to being squeezed between two arteries in thin men (the so-called "nutcracker"), which raises pressure further upstream. A varicocele that appears only on the right side — or one that suddenly appears in an older man — is a red flag that needs an abdominal scan to rule out something pressing on the veins from above.

The damage from this backed-up blood comes through several overlapping routes. Scrotal temperature rises by a degree or so. Blood stagnates, starving testicular tissue of oxygen. Toxic byproducts from the adrenal glands reflux down through the same valve-failed vein. All of this generates oxidative stress in the testicle. Sperm get the worst of it: their membranes get peroxidized, and breaks accumulate in the DNA packed inside the sperm head. The hormone-producing Leydig cells also take a hit and put out less testosterone Agarwal 2017.

Does it actually hurt your fertility — and does fixing it help?

Two thirds of men with a varicocele are fertile. So the first honest thing to say is: having one does not mean you have a fertility problem. But among men who are infertile, varicoceles are massively over-represented — found in about a third of men with primary infertility and up to four in five with secondary infertility (infertility after a previous child) AUA/ASRM 2024. The veins were doing damage; it just took years to show.

What repair reliably does: improve the numbers on a semen analysis. Across more than twenty prospective studies, almost all show better sperm concentration and motility after repair Baazeem 2011. It also reduces the share of sperm with broken DNA — a measurable marker of the oxidative damage caused by the varicocele Lira Neto 2021.

What's still argued: whether better-looking sperm translates into actual babies. This is where the literature gets messy. The cleanest single randomized trial — oligozoospermic men with palpable varicoceles, partners under 35 — showed spontaneous pregnancy in about a third of treated men versus about an eighth of observed men over a year, more than doubling the odds.

But pool that trial with other randomized studies and the picture blurs. A 2020 meta-analysis of four randomized trials and 349 patients found no significant pregnancy benefit — risk ratio 1.05 Wang 2020. The 2021 Cochrane review concluded that repair "may" improve pregnancy odds but rated overall evidence quality very low, and the positive signal vanished when restricted to higher-quality studies Persad 2021. Big surgical case series at top centers report pregnancy rates rising from around 17% in declining-surgery controls to 43% at one year and 69% at two — but those aren't randomized comparisons.

How to read all this honestly: in the narrow population guidelines actually recommend treating — a palpable varicocele plus abnormal semen plus an actively-trying couple plus a partner with workable ovaries — repair offers a real but moderate boost. Outside that population, the evidence does not support intervention as a fertility play. It's not a wonder fix; it is one of the few correctable male-factor causes.

Testosterone, testicle size, and pain — the other three reasons it matters

Testosterone. The same heat-and-oxidative-stress process that hits sperm also drags down the Leydig cells that make testosterone. Across pooled studies, men who get their varicocele repaired see serum testosterone rise by roughly 35 to 100 ng/dL on average Tian 2023 Çayan 2020. That's the difference between low-normal and mid-normal range — meaningful, but not the kind of jump a man on testosterone replacement therapy would feel. For a man who is clearly hypogonadal and has a varicocele, repair is the fertility-preserving move; exogenous testosterone shuts down sperm production entirely.

Testicle size. Varicoceles slow growth of the testicle on the affected side. Around three quarters of teenage boys with a symptomatic varicocele have a measurably smaller left testicle Alkaram 2016. The threshold pediatric urologists generally use for surgery is a 20% size difference between the two — at that point, the affected testicle is on a worse growth trajectory, and earlier surgery (especially before age 14) recovers more of the lost volume than later surgery does.

Pain. Most varicoceles don't hurt. About 2 to 10 percent of men with one have scrotal pain from it — a dull, aching, dragging feeling that gets worse with prolonged standing or activity, and eases when you lie down with your feet up Paick 2019. Conservative measures come first: NSAIDs, supportive underwear, breaking up long stints on your feet. When pain persists and is genuinely consistent with the varicocele (other causes ruled out by ultrasound and exam), microsurgical repair resolves pain in around four out of five well-selected men.

If you might need it fixed: who, when, and how

The decision tree is narrower than it might sound. Both the American urology guidelines and the European ones converge on roughly the same indications.

If none of those apply — you're asymptomatic, not trying to conceive, and your testicles are normal-sized — the right call is to leave it alone AUA/ASRM 2024 EAU 2024.

When you do proceed, there are two modern options that produce roughly equivalent fertility outcomes. The choice usually comes down to recovery, anesthesia preference, and who's most experienced at your local center.

Older techniques — open inguinal, laparoscopic, retroperitoneal — still exist and still work, but they have meaningfully higher recurrence and hydrocele rates than microsurgery, so they've been largely superseded where microsurgical expertise is available.

When not to operate — and the red flag that needs imaging first

Repair is also not the right answer in several common situations where men sometimes get pushed toward it:

  • A subclinical varicocele — one a doctor can't feel, only seen on ultrasound. Both major guideline bodies recommend against treating these. The fertility, testosterone, and testicle-size effects of varicocele all relate to the palpable form. Operating on an imaging-only finding adds risk for no documented benefit AUA/ASRM 2024.
  • No sperm in the ejaculate (non-obstructive azoospermia). Repair returns enough motile sperm to skip a sperm-retrieval procedure in fewer than one in ten of these men — about the same rate as just looking more carefully through a centrifuged semen sample. Going to surgery delays in-vitro fertilization by at least six months in a population where time often matters AUA/ASRM 2024.
  • You're not trying to have a baby, your testicles are normal-sized, and you have no pain. An incidentally-found varicocele in a fertile asymptomatic man is a non-event. Watching is the answer.

The procedure itself has real if low complication rates: roughly a 1% chance of accidentally tying the testicular artery (which can cause atrophy), 0–2% recurrence, and a 10–50% chance — depending on the series — that a pain that was there before surgery is still there after. Embolization adds rare but serious risks of vessel injury and coil migration. None of this is a reason to avoid repair when it's indicated; all of it is reason to avoid it when it isn't.

What guides get wrong

"A varicocele means you're infertile." No. Two-thirds of men with one father children without help. A varicocele is a risk factor and a correctable lesion when it does cause trouble — not a diagnosis of infertility on its own.

"Surgery fixes the problem." Repair improves semen parameters in around two thirds of treated men and roughly doubles spontaneous pregnancy odds in the well-selected target population — meaningful, but not "fixes." About a third of treated men don't get meaningful semen improvement, and pregnancy is not guaranteed even when the numbers improve.

"Find out if you have one — get an ultrasound." The major urology bodies specifically recommend against routine scrotal ultrasound in initial fertility evaluation. A competent physical exam by a urologist is the diagnostic standard. Ultrasound exists to confirm and grade — not to discover varicoceles too small to feel, since those don't need treating AUA/ASRM 2024.

"You can shrink a varicocele with cold packs, supplements, or special underwear." No high-quality evidence supports any of this. Supportive underwear can ease pain. Nothing reliably reverses the venous dilation short of repair.

"Repair raises testosterone enough to skip testosterone therapy." It can, in some men, but the average increase is in the dozens of ng/dL, not the hundreds. The case for choosing repair over testosterone therapy is mostly about preserving fertility — exogenous testosterone reliably shuts down sperm production.

Cost, time, and what the visit actually looks like

The first step is a urologist's exam, not an ultrasound. In a warm room, standing, the urologist palpates the cord above each testicle both at rest and while you bear down (the Valsalva maneuver). A grade-2 or grade-3 varicocele feels like a soft cluster of veins; grade 3 is visible bulging through the scrotal skin. Grade 1 is felt only on Valsalva. Smaller veins detected only on Doppler ultrasound are "subclinical" and, as above, don't usually get treated.

If repair is on the table, costs in the United States run roughly $4,000 to $10,000 self-pay for either microsurgical varicocelectomy or embolization — typically covered by insurance when there's a fertility or pain indication. Embolization is sometimes a slight bit cheaper because it skips the operating-room facility charges. Worth keeping in perspective: one cycle of IVF with ICSI runs $15,000–$30,000+ per attempt, so when repair restores natural fertility, the economics are wildly in its favor.

Recovery: with microsurgery, count on a week off desk work, two to three weeks before you're back to running, lifting, or any sport. Embolization recovery is much faster — most men are back to normal activity within a couple of days. Either way, semen analysis changes take time to show up. Don't expect to see anything on the first three-month semen analysis; peak improvement typically lands around six months, and when pregnancy happens it's a median of about seven months post-repair.

Two populations where the call is different

If you're an adolescent or young man with a varicocele found at a sports physical

Most adolescent varicoceles are detected incidentally and don't need anything done. The threshold for intervention is whether the affected testicle is keeping up in size with the other one. Pediatric urologists typically watch with serial exams and ultrasound measurements; surgery becomes the right answer when there's a grade 2 or 3 varicocele plus a 20% or greater size deficit on the affected side, or documented progression of size differential over time. Catch-up growth after repair is best in boys younger than 14 and gets less reliable with age Alkaram 2016. The harder question — whether repair in adolescence actually translates into better adult fertility — doesn't have long-term randomized data behind it; the call is made on the testicle-growth signal as a stand-in.

If you're trying to conceive with a partner over 35

This is where the math gets tricky. Repair takes six months to start showing in the semen and a median of seven months to produce a pregnancy. If your partner is 38, that's most of a year of declining egg quality you've spent waiting. Many fertility specialists will recommend proceeding to in-vitro fertilization with intracytoplasmic sperm injection in parallel rather than waiting on a repair to deliver. The conversation is genuinely a couples-level decision, not a male-only one — and the answer depends heavily on the partner's ovarian reserve, the severity of the semen abnormality, and how time-pressured the couple is.

What happens if you ignore one that needed attention

For most men with a varicocele, ignoring it is the right move and nothing happens. The stakes question is about the subset where intervention would have helped.

For the man trying to conceive whose semen analysis came back abnormal: the months stretch on. Every cycle that doesn't produce a pregnancy is more weight on the relationship and more pressure to escalate. The interventional clock keeps running on the female side — by the time fertility-clinic conversations seriously begin, the partner may be 36, then 38, and the options narrow. Watching the calendar lose months you didn't need to lose is the felt experience here: not a dramatic event, but a slow accumulation of "we should have started this earlier."

For the adolescent with a grade 3 varicocele and a visibly smaller left testicle: the window for catch-up growth narrows year by year. Recovery of testicular volume after repair is documented in roughly half of preoperatively atrophic testes when surgery is done before age 14; the recovery rate drops with each year of delay Alkaram 2016. The teenager doesn't notice anything; the trade-off is purely about future adult fertility potential, which makes the call hard for parents to feel viscerally and easy to defer.

For the symptomatic man: prolonged standing — at work, in queues, at sporting events — gradually becomes something to plan around. Long flights and long car drives end with an ache. Men report being more aware of the affected side after exercise, after sex, after a long day. Conservative measures handle most of this, and when they don't, repair handles most of what remains.

For the hypogonadal man with a clinical varicocele who reflexively starts on testosterone replacement: fertility shuts down within months and the door on a natural conception closes Çayan 2020. That door is not always easy to reopen later.

What changes when repair is the right call and it works

You don't feel anything in the first few weeks. The recovery is the recovery — a week of being careful, a few weeks of taking it easy on heavy exercise.

Around month three, the first follow-up semen analysis usually shows nothing yet; the testicle's cycle of producing new sperm takes about that long, so the analysis is mostly still showing pre-surgery sperm. The six-month analysis is the one that tends to surprise people: sperm concentration up, motility up, and on a sperm-DNA-fragmentation test, the share of damaged sperm down by a meaningful chunk Lira Neto 2021. Around two-thirds of treated men see this kind of improvement Baazeem 2011.

If pregnancy is what you were aiming for, the median time from repair to conception runs around seven months. In the indicated population, around a third of couples conceive spontaneously within a year — compared to roughly an eighth in the observed arm of the strongest randomized trial Abdel-Meguid 2011.

For the hypogonadal man, testosterone tends to settle at a new baseline by three to six months — typically 35 to 100 ng/dL higher than where it started Tian 2023. That's enough to move a low-normal level into the middle of the range; not enough to substitute for the kind of jump a man on testosterone replacement therapy would feel, but enough to be measurable.

For the adolescent with a growth-stunted testicle, the response shows up on serial ultrasound: about half of preoperatively atrophic testes recover normal volume within a year or two when surgery happens early enough Alkaram 2016.

For the symptomatic man, the dull aching pain that drove the visit usually fades over the first few weeks after surgery as the postoperative inflammation resolves. About four in five well-selected patients report lasting relief; the others get partial improvement or, in a minority, no change Paick 2019.

Related topics

  • Semen analysis — the test that drives the entire varicocele-and-fertility decision tree. If you're trying to conceive, this is the first step before any urology visit.
  • Sperm DNA fragmentation testing — emerging test, not yet in guidelines as a stand-alone indication for varicocele repair but increasingly used by fertility specialists.
  • IVF and intracytoplasmic sperm injection — the parallel-track option when time is short or repair isn't indicated.
  • Testosterone replacement therapy — the easier-but-fertility-killing alternative for hypogonadal men; understand the tradeoff before starting.
  • Hydrocele — different scrotal swelling (fluid, not veins) that gets confused with varicocele on self-exam.
  • Nutcracker syndrome — the underlying venous compression that contributes to some left-sided varicoceles; rarely needs separate treatment.
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