PEDIATRICS Vol. 80 No. 1 July 1987, pp. 111-117
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Annual Meeting of the Section on Pediatric Urology

Summary of the Meeting, Oct 18-21, 1985

KENNETH I. GLASSBERG MD1

1 Chairman, Editorial Committee

The Section of Urology of the American Academy of Pediatrics met for three days in conjunction with the 54th annual meeting of the Academy in San Antonio. Papers of interest to the pediatrician are summarized herein according to topic. The number of basic research papers is continuing to increase. The second annual Pediatric Urology Medal was awarded to Sir David Innes Williams for contributions made to the field.

ANDROLOGY

Testicular Torsion

Some recent studies suggest that individuals who undergo testicular torsion may have a higher incidence of infertility than the normal male population.1,2 A number of papers were presented at the 1984 meeting debating a possible immune response that is initiated by the torsed testicle and that plays havoc on the nontorsed testicle. One such paper presented this year by Howards and Turner could not find any contralateral testicular damage following surgically induced torsion on rats. Hadziselimoyic and co-authors studied biopsies taken from the nontorsed testicle in 38 boys who underwent surgery for unilateral testicular torsion. In 20 of the 38 patients (58%), preexisting contralateral testicular abnormalities could be identified, which suggests that the infertility in patients with unilateral testicular torsion may be a consequence of preexisting testicular pathology rather than an immunopathy.

Cryptorchidism

Contralateral Testicle. Three studies addressed the problem of infertility in patients with a history of cryptorchidism and the effect of the undescended testicle upon the contralateral testicle.

In one study, Kogan and associates set out to determine whether surgically induced cryptorchidism produces a deleterious effect upon the normally descended contralateral testicle.

Submitted on October 13, 1986
Accepted on October 13, 1986