Varicocele in Children" (Варикоцеле у детей) , released in
According to the 1982 Okru full data, among 218 operated boys (aged 10–16) followed for 2–5 years:
Not visible, but easily felt (palpated) while standing. varikotsele u detey 1982 okru full
Focuses on school medical screenings where doctors examine teenage boys. It utilizes medical animation to explain the three degrees of varicocele and the embryogenesis of the inferior vena cava. It also showcases live laboratory research, including microscopic analysis of spermatozoa and experimental studies on rats at the Laboratory of Immunology of the Institute of Human Morphology.
For modern researchers and clinicians, digitized copies of that 1982 "full" issue may be found in Russian state medical libraries (e.g., RNMSU, Sechenov Library) under the journal name "Vestnik Okruzhnoy Bolnitsy" (District Hospital Bulletin) or "Pediatriya i Detskaya Khirurgiya" . They rarely complain of physical discomfort, which is
If you are looking for a specific video or PDF hosted on OK.ru:
However, I cannot produce a specific guide from a 1982 Soviet medical source titled exactly as written, because: They rarely complain of physical discomfort
As demonstrated in the film, the standard of care in 1982 involved open retroperitoneal surgeries:
While a searchable "full text" transcript is not widely available in a single document, the film covers several key medical and educational topics:
Most children and teenagers with varicocele are completely asymptomatic. They rarely complain of physical discomfort, which is why historical school screenings—as shown in the 1982 archive—were so critical. When symptoms do manifest, they include:
While the 1982 film emphasized traditional surgical approaches like the Ivanissevich procedures, modern practice has shifted significantly: : Current standards favor Doppler ultrasound mapping