Archive for the ‘vasectomy’ Category

Listen and Learn

Saturday, August 28th, 2010
Listen and listen hard...

Listen and listen hard...

This week, I refused to perform a vasectomy on a patient of mine. That is, until he saw a doctor about his sky-high blood pressure. Thirty years old and a father of three, he is a productive, hardworking member of society who just happened to never have seen a doctor as an adult. Unusual? Not at all.

Why does this happen? Is it because, in the words of Andy Rooney, that “death is a distant rumor to the young?”  What is it about being young and male that instills this concept of immortality? For one thing, men do not have a monthly biological reminder of their health, similar to the female menstrual cycle. Second, the culture of men is imbibed with the “breadwinner” mentality that tends to equate illness with weakness. Lastly, men are terrible goaltenders of their own health. It is simply not on the radar of most men to think about their health unless something a) hurts, or b) is life threatening.

Lets delve into the last of these a bit as there is an interesting corollary to back this up. It is clear from many studies over the last century that married men uniformly outlive their single counterparts. In some studies, the difference in lifespan approached 10 years. Viewed another way, divorce affects a man’s health about the same as picking up a pack-a-day cigarette habit. So, it is clear that one of the best strategies to a longer life is to marry and stay married. If it is in your personality to gain immortality by this approach then so be it.

But that may not be the case of my patient, who in fact came back one week later for his vasectomy, feeling empowered, and with his blood pressure under perfect control. “And I thought the headaches that I had been getting were due to the stress I have been feeling.” He was a changed man, in control of his health for the first time in his life. He also understood the concept that life-threatening illnesses may be subtler than a broken bone.

After 17 years of caring for young men, it is clear to me that they are an incredibly underserved population. In fact, this is one the key points that I will make as an invited speaker to the Centers For Disease Control (CDC) upcoming summit on “Advancing Men’s Reproductive Health in the US” to be held in Atlanta next months. In my practice, I assume that men need help understanding how to take better care of themselves. I know that they would like to find out more about what health issues they may have inherited that can harm them, but they have trouble asking and knowing where to turn. Hence my practice motto: “The way to take great care of men is simple: just listen to them.” And listen quietly, as their voices are soft. Trust me, this hardly ever happens in the standard, 12-minute office visit that is currently de rigueur in this country.

Freud’s Vasectomy

Sunday, July 25th, 2010
A man looking for his mojo.

A man looking for his mojo.

Do you know why Sigmund Freud, esteemed psychoanalyst, had a vasectomy when he was 67 years old? How about William Butler Yeats, the famed writer, having his vasectomy at 69 years of age. Were they that sexually active and worried about conceiving? God bless them if this is true!

Hardly. Believe it or not, vasectomies were done in the roaring twenties and thirties in Austria by an endocrinologist named Steinach for physical and mental rejuvenation. “It revived my creative power,” wrote Yeats in 1937. This may be true as Yeats wrote a crop of poems during this period that rank with his best work. At that time, a vasectomy was considered the “holy grail” of perpetual youth. Steinach felt that by blocking sperm flow, male hormone production in the testis would improve.

The idea of hormonal rejuvenation really started in earnest with an acclaimed endocrinologist named Brown-Sequard who in 1889 injected himself with testicular extracts from rats and dogs. This led to the trend of “organotherapy” in which all sorts of animal organs were injected for every conceivable human illness. Sound familiar at all? It also led to serious and productive experimental research on the function of glands in the body.

The rejuvenating vasectomy was not an isolated claim to fame by Eugen Steinach from Vienna. He was nominated for a Nobel Prize six times for innovative studies that showed that male or female development depended almost entirely on the sex glands and their secretions. Give this theory a pinch of salt to incorporate modern genetics and is it true enough today.

What went wrong with Steinbach’s vasectomy idea was that he believed that narrow biologic principles could be used to treat the wide and complex condition of human sexuality. The funny thing is, almost 100 years later, we are still trying to figure out how to stay young forever.