Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P56851 (epididymal)
11,273 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The purpose of this study was to assess intestinal function after ischemia-reperfusion (I/R). In two groups of intestinal lymph fistula rats (experimental), the superior mesenteric artery (SMA) was isolated and occluded for 10 min. In the remaining two groups (controls), the SMA was isolated but not occluded. Twenty-four or forty-eight hours after I/R, a lipid test meal containing radioactive triolein was infused at 3 ml/h for 8 h. Radioactive lipid in lymph, lumen, intestinal wall, portal and systemic blood, epididymal fat pads, and liver was determined. Lymph radioactive lipid output was markedly depressed in the 24-h experimental rats compared with the other three groups, and this deficiency was restored 48 h after I/R. This reduction in lipid output in lymph appeared to be the result of an increased portal transport of the infused radioactive lipid rather than a deficiency of digestion or absorption of infused triolein. We have further validated the markedly increased portal transport of radioactive lipid after I/R by using Triton WR-1339, which blocks peripheral metabolism of hepatic very low-density lipoproteins (VLDL). When Triton WR-1339 was introduced in 24 experimental and control animals, the experimental rats accumulated significantly more radioactive lipid (12-14% of infused lipid) than the control animals (2-3% of infused lipid), indicating a marked increase in portal transport of radioactive lipid, which was taken up by the liver and then resecreted into circulation as VLDL. Thus intestinal lipid absorption is sensitive to the deleterious effects of ischemia followed by reperfusion, and therefore it may be used as a functional assessment of the small intestine after I/R-induced injuries.
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PMID:Effect of ischemia-reperfusion on lipid digestion and absorption in rat intestine. 201 34

Male germ cells are quite sensitive to interruption in blood flow. Eight weeks after subjection to 45 minutes of testicular ischemia, the spermatogenic epithelium of the rat remains significantly damaged, though other cell types are well preserved. The authors evaluated the testicular recovery of the rats at 8 and 72 weeks after the 45-minute period of warm ischemia. Twenty-eight rats were studied: 14 underwent 45 minutes of total left testicular ischemia; 14 received no treatment. Four rats from each group were necropsied at 8 weeks to document the ischemic injury. At 72 weeks, the 18 surviving rats were necropsied to evaluate the long-term outcome of the treatment. At 8 weeks, significant left testicular injury was documented. However, at 72 weeks there was no difference in testicular weight or sperm head count between the groups: in all 36 testicles, the repopulation index was 1.00, the epididymal index was 3+, the modified Johnsen index was 14, and the spermatic cord score was 7 (all are maximum obtainable scores). Neither contralateral orchiopathy nor injury to spermatic cord structures was observed. Our work shows that ischemia-induced testicular injury is fully reversible with time in this model.
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PMID:Long-term outcome following testicular ischemia in the rat. 221 44

It is often stated that unilateral testicular torsion results in damage to the contralateral testis; however, there are a growing number of experimental and clinical papers which suggest this is not so. Conflicting results from experimental studies confuse the issue and may be due, among other things, to some specifics of the experimental model. In the present paper, we have examined bilateral rat testes 30 and 60 days after 720 degrees torsion to determine 1) the effect of unilateral testicular torsion with and without the inclusion of epididymal torsion, 2) the effect of relatively chronic torsion (24 hr., 10 day) versus relatively acute torsion (two hr., four hr.), and 3) the effect of establishing the model using scrotal surgery versus using an abdominal approach. Bilateral testicular histology, testis wt. (gm.), cauda epididymal sperm concentrations (sp./ml.), and cauda sperm motility scores (0-4) were examined. Ipsilateral testicular torsion or testicular plus epididymal torsion of two hr. or four hr. duration significantly reduced (p less than .05) ipsilateral testis weights, sperm concentrations, and motility scores, and disrupted normal tissue histology. Contralateral testicles were not altered. Epididymal ischemia alone produced no significant ipsilateral or contralateral effects. Chronic torsion (one day, 10 days) also destroyed ipsilateral testis function without altering the contralateral testicles. The occult cryptorchidism associated with the scrotal approach to establishing the torsion model had no effect on contralateral testicles. In no group, using either Lewis rats or Sprague-Dawley rats, were contralateral testicles altered by unilateral testicular torsion. These results plus recent clinical reports indicate that contralateral testicular damage due to ipsilateral torsion is hardly a proven phenomenon, let alone a significant factor contributing to male infertility.
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PMID:On unilateral testicular and epididymal torsion: no effect on the contralateral testis. 349 19

According to new trends and terms in microsurgery, the intra-serous proximal hemideferentectomy is compared to the classical vasectomy in rat. The effects of these surgical models are evaluated on morphological and functional bases. The anatomo-pathological parameters considered (stenosis and leakage of the anastomosis of the epididymal tubule conseguent on local ischemia) have been correlated with functional parameters "in vitro" (spontaneous motility and field stimulation) in order to plan the best microsurgical procedure in the experimental tubulo-vasostomy.
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PMID:[Intraserosal proximal hemideferentectomy versus classical proximal hemivasectomy in the rat. Anatomo-functional aspects and proposal for a new terminology]. 402 26

During the course of acute bacterial epididymitis of nonvenereal origin, severe epididymal inflammation and edema can produce compression of adjacent branches of the spermatic vessels, which can compromise the testicular vascular system. Scrotal fixation over the involved testicle heralds this event and indicates actual or impending epididymal suppuration. At this crucial moment either surgical decompression of the epididymis or epididymectomy is indicated to prevent ischemia of the testis and subsequent development of gangrenous epididymo-orchitis with testicular slough. Between 1956 and 1980, 14 epididymotomies were done, which resulted in salvage of 12 testicles (86 per cent). During the same period 10 patients with acute epididymitis had progression of the disease to gangrenous epididymo-orchitis, which necessitated orchiectomy. Epididymotomy can prevent progression of acute epididymitis to gangrenous epididymo-orchitis in many instances and is believed to have a role in the management of this troublesome affliction.
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PMID:The surgical management of acute bacterial epididymitis with emphasis on epididymotomy. 714 92

Unilateral anorchidism, or monorchidism, refers to the absence of one testis. It is defined as the unilateral or bilateral partial or complete absence of testicular tissue, with or without rudimentary epididymal and spermatic cord remnants, in the presence of internal Wolffian duct development and normal external genitalia. In the case of monorchidism with derivatives of the Wolffian duct an ipsilateral testis must be present at least up to the 16th week of gestation to induce the formation of an epididymal structure. Few studies have been devoted to the etiology of monorchidism or to management of the contralateral solitary testis. With the aid of a personal series of 36 cases and a review of the literature the etiopathology of monorchidism is discussed; the long-term fate of the contralateral testis is considered, and an answer to the question of whether protection of the solitary contralateral testis by orchidopexy is really indicated, as stated by most authors, is offered. Ischemia due to intrauterine torsion is thought to be the cause of monorchidism; it is thus a syndrome of testicular regression. The histopathological findings are characteristic, if not specific, for atrophy secondary to ischemia. Vas deferens, epididymis, calcification or hemosiderin pigmentation is noted in almost 90% of cases. In the absence of these remnants, clinical and surgical findings and the presence of a richly vascular stroma support the diagnosis. According to the author's experience, exploration and fixation of the contralateral testis is neither necessary nor desirable.
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PMID:Monorchidism or unilateral anorchidism. 791 Sep 27

The epididymal epithelium contributes to formation of a luminal fluid that is essential for the protection of spermatozoa from a variety of insults including changes in oxygen tension. A key regulator of the response to oxygen debt in many cells is hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1). A transcription factor composed of alpha and beta subunits, HIF-1 activates genes that mediate oxygen homeostasis and cell survival pathways or trigger cell death responses. Previously we have shown that HIF-1alpha mRNA is expressed in the adult rat epididymis. Goals of this study were to determine whether HIF-1alpha protein is activated by ischemia in the rat epididymis, to determine whether epididymal HIF-1alpha mRNA expression is androgen dependent, and to identify epididymal cell types expressing HIF-1alpha and beta. Immunoblot analysis revealed that HIF-1alpha protein is primarily present in corpus and cauda of the normoxic epididymis and unaffected by ischemia, whereas HIF-1beta was detected equally in all regions and also unaffected by ischemia. HIF-1alpha mRNA expression in all regions was not affected by 15 days bilateral orchiectomy. Principal cells stained positive for HIF-1alpha by immunocytochemistry, with the epithelium of initial segment and caput epididymidis staining less intensely than corpus and cauda. HIF-1beta immunoreactivity was equally present in principal cells in all regions. Clear, narrow, and basal cells were unreactive for HIF-1alpha and beta. The presence of HIF-1 in normoxic epididymis and the regional distribution of HIF-1alpha suggests fundamental differences in how proximal and distal regions of the epididymis maintain oxygen homeostasis to protect the epithelium and spermatozoa from hypoxia.
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PMID:Expression and localization of hypoxia-inducible factor-1 subunits in the adult rat epididymis. 1466 8

Testicular microlithiasis is a well-defined clinical and pathologic entity easily diagnosed through testicular echography; however, its association with cancer and infertility is now under debate. Many efforts have been done in recent years to clarify the spectrum of lesions observed in testicular microlithiasis, but no published data as to the existence of a possible microlithiasis of the epididymis and the rete testis have been found. We have observed microlithiasis of the epididymis and the rete testis in surgical (8 epididymis and 6 testis) and autopsy specimens (12 cases). In decreased order of frequency, microliths of the proximal spermatic way were seen in rete testis, epididymal duct, and efferent ducts. Intraluminal, subepithelial, and interstitial microliths were localized along these segments of the spermatic way. Subepithelial microliths were the most frequently found. A granulomatous reaction around the interstitial epididymal microliths, mimicking malacoplakia, was observed in 1 case. The differential diagnosis of microliths includes corpora amilacea, Michaelis-Gutmann bodies, calcium deposits, hyaline globules, and parasites, like the giant kidney worm Dioctophyme renale. In infants and young adults, microlithiasis of the epididymis and the rete testis is frequently associated with alterations in the development of the proximal spermatic way. In elderly adults, it is related to ischemia and obstruction of the spermatic way.
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PMID:Microlithiasis of the epididymis and the rete testis. 1508 71

We report a case of epididymal microlithiasis that was diagnosed sonographically in a 75-year-old man undergoing scrotal sonographic examination to investigate right groin pain associated with an inguinal hernia. The sonographic appearance was that of multiple comet-shaped foci of microcalcification throughout both epididymides, with associated comet-tail artifacts. The testes had normal appearance with no evidence of testicular microlithiasis. The patient subsequently remained well after hernia repair. To our knowledge, epididymal microlithiasis has only previously been reported in a cadaveric study; the authors of that study hypothesized that the condition is caused by aging, with ischemia likely implicated in the pathogenesis. There are many other patterns of extratesticular calcification, including sperm granuloma, hematoma, and chronic epididymitis. We discuss how these differ in appearance from epididymal microlithiasis. Epididymal microlithiasis is a completely separate entity from testicular microlithiasis and should be recognized and dismissed by sonographers and radiologists.
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PMID:Sonographic appearance of epididymal microlithiasis. 1737 89

A pediatric patient of 12 years consulted for a left scrotal mass of 2 months of evolution. After suspecting a cystic content due to positive transillumination, on ultrasonography a scrotal cyst separated from the testis, of 5 cm in its maximum length, was confirmed. Due to size, parental anxiety, and the referred short evolution, excision was decided. Given the clinical radiological findings, a scrotal incision was chosen, obtaining complete excision. Biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of simple epididymal cyst (EC). ECs usually present as painless, scrotal swelling in adolescents as a result of dilatation of the efferent epididymal tubules. Many cases (up to 60%) regress spontaneously. In these, average time to involute ranges from 4 to 50 months. Although cases of cyst torsion have been described (with pain derived from ischemia and inflammation), conservative management has been suggested in the majority, both in pediatric and in adult series. Surgery is recommended in some patients, due to testicular pain or increased paratesticular mass, as was our case.
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PMID:Benign Scrotal Tumor in a Pediatric Patient: Epididymal Cyst. 3002 99


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