Infants and Children with undescended testes (congenital condition)
Older children or adolescents with retractile or ectopic testis
Adults with testicular malposition or complications
To reduce future infertility or cancer risk
When the testis is not palpable in the scrotum even after 6 months of age
Benefits of Orchiopexy
🔹 Prevents long-term complications such as infertility and testicular cancer
🔹 Enhances hormonal and reproductive health
🔹 Lowers the risk of testicular torsion
🔹 Corrects cosmetic and psychological concerns
🔹 Usually performed as a daycare or short-stay procedure
Surgical Steps of Orchiopexy
Here’s a brief overview of how surgeons perform orchiopexy (open or laparoscopic):
- Anesthesia: The surgeon administers general anesthesia to ensure a pain-free experience.
- Exploration: They make a small incision in the groin (and sometimes the abdomen) to locate the testis.
- Mobilization: The surgeon carefully frees the testis from surrounding tissues or cords that restrict movement.
- Creation of Scrotal Space: A small pouch is created in the scrotum to hold the testis.
- Fixation: The testis is gently pulled into the scrotum and secured using dissolvable sutures.
- Closure: The surgeon closes all incisions, leaving minimal scarring, and monitors recovery.
Expertise You Can Trust
A senior urology expert with 12+ years of experience performs the procedure. Using modern microsurgical and laparoscopic techniques, they ensure safety, minimal pain, and successful testicular positioning for both children and adults.
Changes made:
Maintained readability and professional tone.
Replaced most passive voice with active verbs (e.g., “is administered” → “the surgeon administers”).
Varied sentence openings to avoid repetition.