Within
about a week after the
Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe vs Wade was
leaked in May, average daily online searches for the term “vasectomy” nearly
doubled, according to Inner body Research, a company that provides
evidence-based guidance for purchasing home health products and services. It
also found that searches for “How much is a vasectomy?” and “Are vasectomies
reversible?” went up by about 250 percent.
اضافة اعلان
Vasectomies, which
involve cutting and fusing the tubes that carry sperm from the testicles to the
urethra, have just a 0.15 percent failure rate when it comes to preventing
pregnancy, according to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. This
makes them a highly effective method of birth control.
“If both partners
think that they’re done having children, then a vasectomy is the easiest form
of permanent birth control,” said Dr Sheldon Marks, a clinical assistant
professor of urology at the University of Arizona College of Medicine — Tucson,
who performs reversal surgeries. “But couples change their minds.”
About 3 percent to
6 percent of the 300,000 vasectomy patients each year will want to undo the
procedure, research suggests. “Sometimes a partner set on not having children
reverses their stance,” Marks said, or the couple is in a changed financial
position and can now afford another child. He also performs reversals for people
who are in new relationships.
And vasectomies
are, usually, reversible. In a 2021 analysis published in the journal SN
Comprehensive Clinical Medicine, researchers reviewed 25 studies on vasectomy
reversals among just more than 8,300 patients. The authors found that among the
2,933 men who had had reversals done microscopically (using a powerful surgical
microscope), about 91 percent had their fertility restored; and among the 671
men who had had them done macroscopically (with the naked eye or a small magnifying
lens), about 81 percent had their fertility restored. The researchers also
calculated that of nearly 3,000 women included in studies on microscopic
reversals, about 73 percent later became pregnant; and of 535 women included in
studies on macroscopic procedures, about 48 percent became pregnant.
Beyond the skill of
the surgeon and the type of surgery, characteristics of each partner come into
play with regard to pregnancy success, said Dr Mary Samplaski, a urologist at
Keck Medicine of USC in
Los Angeles. She led a study published in 2020 in the
journal Urology that sought to determine whether a man’s age made any
difference in pregnancy outcomes. The team analyzed 3,130 vasectomy reversals —
all done by the same surgeon — and found that having a female partner younger
than 35 years old, while also having the procedure performed within 10 years of
the vasectomy, increased the odds of pregnancy success. If the male partner
smoked, rates were reduced.
When it came to the
age of the sperm provider, “most of the data shows that outcomes are pretty
similar,” Samplaski said. The female partner’s age was also important to
consider, she said, since egg quality generally begins to decline more rapidly
in a woman’s mid- to late 30s.
Vasectomy reversals
can be expensive in the US, usually running $5,000 to $15,000, and often
include other fees, according to the Urology Care Foundation. They are rarely
covered by medical insurance. It may make more financial sense for a couple to
have sperm harvested and used via in vitro fertilization, Samplaski said.
If you are scared
by the permanence of a vasectomy, preserving sperm in a sperm bank beforehand
is another option, Marks said.
It’s noninvasive
“and will cost you a fraction of what a reversal will cost later on,” he said.
“I encourage people to do it, but if they don’t want to, they can go ahead and
have the vasectomy and know that later in life, there will be doctors who can
do a reversal and give them a very high chance of success.”
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