Varikotsele U Detey -1982- Apr 2026

1982 was not a year of grand discoveries—no Nobel prizes, no miracle drugs. It was the year a man in Kazan convinced the world that a twisted vein in a child’s scrotum could rewrite the story of his adult life. And for that, every pediatric urologist, from Boston to Beijing, owes Rutner a quiet debt.

The Soviet approach was aggressive. The Ivanissevich technique (high retroperitoneal ligation) was modified for smaller anatomy. Surgeons in Leningrad and Kyiv began operating on boys as young as nine. The results, presented at the 1982 All-Union Congress of Urologists in Tbilisi, were startling: of 84 prepubertal boys who underwent surgery, 79 showed catch-up growth of the affected testis within 18 months. varikotsele u detey -1982-

A 2021 study from St. Petersburg revisited Rutner’s original cohort—now men in their late 40s. Of the 79 boys who had surgery before age 14, 71 had fathered at least one child. Of the 22 who were observed (by parental refusal) and operated only after age 18, only 14 had children. The numbers are small, but the ghost of 1982 whispers: Rutner was right. Forty years after that dog-eared monograph landed on the desks of Soviet urologists, we live in Rutner’s shadow. The boy with a silent varicocele is no longer dismissed. The school physical now includes a careful scrotal exam. And the question is no longer whether to treat a pediatric varicocele, but when and how . 1982 was not a year of grand discoveries—no

By Dr. A. Volkov (Historical Medical Retrospective) The Soviet approach was aggressive

But Rutner’s work, building on fragmented studies from Eastern Europe and a single 1978 paper from the Mayo Clinic, presented a radical idea: Using Doppler ultrasonography—still a futuristic toy in most Soviet hospitals—Rutner demonstrated that venous reflux in the left testicular vein begins silently, often before any visible vein can be palpated.