Abstract

Arteriosclerosis was induced in the internal spermatic artery of rams to determine if this condition is implicated in the aetiology of testicular pathology which causes male infertility. Data were collected on sperm concentration and motility for 56 days following surgery to provide an index of testicular function. Testes were then weighed and a testicular biopsy score count was performed on histological sections to assess spermatogenic potential of seminiferous tubules. Vascular disturbance caused focal damage of the seminiferous epithelium, similar to that seen among infertile men, and a reduction in ejaculate volume, sperm concentration and sperm motility. Sperm concentration decreased following ischaemia yet was maintained to some degree by a germ-cell depleted spermatogenic epithelium. Normal testicular morphology was maintained above a testis weight of about 120 g (for an individual testis), but below this threshold spermatogenesis was severely impaired. In conclusion, these data have provided information on the relationship between testicular morphology and function following ischaemia in the ram. Furthermore, the morphological changes induced in the testis were similar to those seen among infertile men and, by their focal nature, could explain the distinction between oligozoospermia and azoospermia in men exhibiting spermatogenic arrest.

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