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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (
asymmetrical
)
12,197
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The right gonadal vein (GV=testicular vein in men, ovarian vein in women) usually drains into the inferior vena cava (IVC) while the left gonadal vein drains into the left renal vein (RV). This anatomical difference induces relatively weak haemodynamics in the left testicular vein (TV) and is considered to be a cause of a left
varicocele
. In textbooks on embryology, it has been documented that bilateral supracardinal veins (=origin of right and left IVC) and the subcardinal sinus (=origin of RVs and GVs) symmetrically develop during early embryogenesis. However, persistence and regression of the right and left supracardinal veins, respectively, results in drainage of the left GV into the ipsilateral RV. A double IVC (DIVC) commonly originates from a failure of disappearance of the left supracardinal vein. Although there have been a considerable number of case reports on DIVC, little attention has been paid to the anatomy of the left GV in such cases. We report here an autopsy case, a 72-year-old Japanese man, with a DIVC. This case belongs to type BC of McClure and Butler's classification. In this case, it was observed that the right TV drained into the confluence of the right IVC with the ipsilateral RV, while the left TV drained into the left RV in spite of the presence of the left IVC. This case indicates that the embryonic anastomosis point between the subcardinal sinus and the supracardinal vein on the left side is different from that on the right side. Statistical analysis of many case reports of DIVC also suggests that the bilateral supracardinal veins tend to asymmetrically anastomose with the subcardinal sinus during embryogenesis. These data imply that drainage of the left GV into the ipsilateral RV leads to regression of the left supracardinal vein but also to
asymmetrical
anastomosis between the supracardinal veins and the subcardinal sinus.
...
PMID:Embryological consideration of drainage of the left testicular vein into the ipsilateral renal vein: analysis of cases of a double inferior vena cava. 1138 Jul 3
The inheritance of varicoceles and the potential transmission to first-degree relatives has rarely been investigated. In the present study, we examined the first-degree relatives of men with known
varicocele
to reveal the familial risk for
varicocele
. Of the patients with clinical
varicocele
who presented with infertility, testicular pain, or
asymmetrical
swelling of the scrotum between June 1, 2008 and May 31, 2009, 49 agreed to have their available first-degree relatives contacted for screening of varicoceles (n = 66). A cohort of 100 consecutive men who applied to the department of internal medicine between 2008 and 2009 for checkup procedure without a history of subfertility or a
varicocele
were used as a control population. Of the 92 first-degree relatives contacted, 66 (71.7%) decided to participate in this study. Of these 66 men, 21 (33.9%) had a palpable
varicocele
on physical examination. Compared with a control population (12%), the prevalence of palpable
varicocele
in the first-degree relatives of patients with known
varicocele
(33.9%) was approximately 3-fold greater (P < .005). Among the first-degree relatives, 4 (21.1%) of 19 fathers and 17 (36.2%) of 47 brothers had palpable
varicocele
. As a conclusion, a significant increase in
varicocele
prevalence is present in the first-degree relatives of men with known varicoceles. Patients should be counseled about this increased risk in male relatives of patients.
...
PMID:Hereditary behavior of varicocele. 1983 29