Men's Health

Vasectomies - Not Necessarily As Permanent As You Might Think

Unfortunately, marriages do not always last forever, and —luckily for some men hoping to start the parenting years over—it looks like vasectomies do not always, either.

An Oregon urologist contends in a new study that men can successfully reverse vasectomies more than 15 years after the original operation.

Some physicians have thought the success rate of reversals declined significantly over time, and some patients wanting to have children were forced to turn to in-vitro fertilization. However, Dr. Eugene Fuchs, a urologist at Oregon Health Sciences University, found half of his patients with old vasectomies were able to impregnate their wives the old-fashioned way.

"They do have a realistic chance of fathering a biological child," says Dr. Larry Lipshultz, professor of urology at Baylor College of Medicine.

In a vasectomy, a physician snips the vas deferens, the tube that carries sperm to the urethra, and then seals off the two ends. Various methods are used for the sealing process; physicians use stainless steel clips or sutures.

No one knows how many vasectomies are performed in the United States each year, Lipshultz says. Some estimate the number near 500,000.

The man will be able to ejaculate after a successful operation, but no sperm will appear in his semen. The man's body still makes sperm, but it is typically reabsorbed. However, some men—the numbers are unknown—later want to have a child.

"It certainly is an increasing number of men due to the increasing divorce rate. The most common reason is divorce and remarriage," Lipshultz says.

In the past, the common wisdom was vasectomy reversals would often fail after several years, he says. In some cases, sperm would back up behind the sealed vas deferens tube over the years, hindering its ability to work properly.

Another possible complication is blockage of the vas deferens due to scarring or inflammation.

A 1991 study in the Journal of Urology found that only 30 percent of vasectomy reversals after between nine and 14 years succeeded in producing pregnancies, says Dr. Rebecca Z. Sokol, director of andrology (male reproductive medicine) at the University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine.

Surgery techniques have improved over the last decade, Sokol says, and that may have contributed to Fuchs' success rate. He was able to successfully reverse vasectomies in one-third of men who had their original surgeries 20 to 25 years ago.

Fuchs studied 173 of his own patients who had vasectomy reversals more than 20 years after the surgery. He reports his findings in the March issue of the journal Fertility and Sterility.

Fuchs found that the fertility of the men did not seem to vary depending on their age. However, the age of women did affect the couple's ability to conceive: The pregnancy rate for women younger than 30 was 64 percent and 28 percent for those older than 40.

Fuchs examined a similarly aged sample of couples who tried in-vitro fertilization, and found that 40 percent of those couples had children.

During in-vitro fertilization, sperm is removed from the man and united with an egg from the woman in a laboratory. Fertilized embryos are then implanted in the woman.

Vasectomy reversal is not cheap. Lipshultz says it may cost between $7,000 and $8,000.

However, Sokol says couples may prefer it to in-vitro fertilization, which may require repeated attempts before a woman becomes pregnant.

Always consult your physician for more information.

May 2002

Vasectomies - Not Necessarily As Permanent As You Might Think

What is Vasectomy?

What Are the Different Types of Vasectomy?

Birth Control After Vasectomy

Risks or Side Effects Associated With Vasectomy

Online Resources




What is Vasectomy?

Vasectomy is a surgical procedure performed to make a man sterile, or unable to father a child.

Generally, vasectomy leaves the patient unchanged except that the vas deferens—the tubes leading to the testes—are blocked. The testes still produce sperm, but the sperm die and are absorbed by the body. The level of testosterone remains the same and all male sexual characteristics remain the same. For most men, the ability to have an erection is unchanged.

What Are the Different Types of Vasectomy?

  • conventional vasectomy
    The conventional method is a surgical procedure that involves small incisions made on each side of a man's scrotum. The tube, called the vas deferens, leading from each testicle is cut and sealed in order to stop sperm from reaching the prostate, where it mixes with the semen. Without sperm in the semen, a man cannot impregnate his partner.

  • "no-scalpel" or "nonsurgical" vasectomy
    In the no-scalpel method, rather than making an incision, the physician makes only one tiny puncture into the skin with a special instrument. This same instrument is used to gently stretch the skin opening so that the tubes can be reached easily.

The tubes are then blocked, using the same method as in conventional vasectomy. Because no incision was made, there is little bleeding and no stitches are needed to close the tiny opening. The opening will heal quickly with little or no scarring.

Birth Control After Vasectomy

Although a man can usually resume sexual activity soon after vasectomy, precautions should be taken against pregnancy until a test shows that his semen is free of sperm.

A vasectomy procedure only blocks the vas deferens at the point where it was sealed. The vasectomy has no effect on sperm that are already beyond that point. Therefore, it is important to not have unprotected sexual intercourse until the absence of sperm from the ejaculate has been confirmed with two negative sperm checks, four to six weeks apart. Generally, the test is first performed after the patient has had 10 to 20 post-vasectomy ejaculations.

Risks or Side Effects Associated With Vasectomy

Although complications such as swelling, bruising, inflammation, and infection may occur after the surgery, they are not common and usually not serious. Men who develop these symptoms, as defined by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), at any time should contact their physicians:

  • epididymitis/orchitis - painful, swollen, and tender epididymis or testis.

  • immune system reactions
    After vasectomy, the testes continue to make sperm. When the sperm cells die, they are absorbed by the body, just as they are in a man who has not had a vasectomy. Sometimes, however, men following a vasectomy develop immune reactions to sperm.
    Sperm usually do not come in contact with immune cells, so they do not elicit an immune response. But, vasectomy breaches the barriers that separate immune cells from sperm, and men can develop anti-sperm antibodies after the surgery. Some physicians and researchers are concerned that these immune reactions against parts of one's own body could cause disease. Rheumatoid arthritis, juvenile diabetes, and multiple sclerosis are some of the illnesses suspected or known to be caused by immune reactions of this type.

  • prostate cancer risk
    Some studies have raised questions about a possible relationship between having a vasectomy and the risk of developing prostate cancer - the most common cancer in American men and the second leading cause of cancer death, after lung cancer. Other studies have shown no increase in prostate cancer among men who have had a vasectomy.
    Consult your physician regarding any concerns you may have about vasectomy or vasectomy reversal procedures.



Online Resources:

(Our Organization is not responsible for the content of Internet sites.)

American Urological Association, Inc.

Fertility and Sterility

Journal of Urology

Men's Health Network

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)

National Kidney and Urologic Diseases Information Clearinghouse (Part of NIDDK)