Orange County Vasectomy Reversal
Reversing Men's Fertility
When a man chooses a vasectomy, he never stops producing sperm. Sperm, of course, are the little swimmers that travel with the semen up through the urethra in order to try to interact with a woman's eggs. Men will produce these sperm during his whole life. When you have a vasectomy, the procedure keeps the sperm from entering the urethra. So if you are a couple looking to reverse a vasectomy, it's a matter of unblocking the sperm from hitting the road to the urethra.
Sperm Blockage
Since a vasectomy keeps sperm from going out the urethra, there is a fair amount of pressure that can build up in the tubes behind where the vasectomy was performed. If there is enough pressure that builds up here, the vasectomy can rupture. The place where the rupture happens becomes yet another spot where blockage happens.
Dr. Aaron Spitz says these types of blockages can hinder the success rate of your Orange County vasectomy reversal. The more blockages there are to your sperm's path to the urethra, the more difficult it is for a surgeon to unblock that path and allow your sperm to flow through freely.
Orange County Vasectomy Reversal
Dr. Spitz went to medical school at Cornell University Medical Center. He completed his residency at the University of Southern California Medical Center and his fellowship at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston. Dr. Spitz has written multiple articles for journals and several chapters about male infertility. His practice is not limited to male infertility, as he also specializes in a range of other medical and psychological issues that surround the male infertility specialization. Dr. Spitz is known for treating the male infertility issue as a family event and realizes that it affects both parties in a relationship.
You may visit Vasectomy Reversal USA to read more about Dr. Spitz, male infertility and the vasectomy reversal surgery.
