
From Vasectomy.com
Three views on SpermCheck and assuring vasectomy success.
Can be. Post surgical issues of testicular or scrotal procedures are complicated by the fact that the patient can see and feel the area of healing. In other words you can’t see or feel the area of healing of an appendectomy. In addition the testicles move around and this too keeps the fact that something has been done heavy on the mind of the male patient. So many times I’ll see a patient after a vasectomy and they will tell me that one or both of their testicles are swollen. Commonly I examine them and everything is normal. I can only deduce that the post surgical changes brought about by cutting the vas tube and sealing it has set in motion a chain of events that causes discomfort and is perceived by the patient as being “swollen.”
Call Kathy Burton at 770-535-0001 ext 113 to schedule a No Scalpel Vasectomy and have a great excuse to stay home and watch basketball. You can also schedule by using the form below or emailing Kathy-Kathy.burton@ngurology.com

From Vasectomy.com’s page “Ask a Doctor.”
Do you have a question for our doctors? Fill in the form below and we’ll try to help.

It’s no secret that this country loves March Madness, but is it true vasectomy appointments spike during this time of year? Do so many men opt for the procedure during March that urologists are flooded with requests? Do men want a reason to stay at home and watch these games that bad?
“Difficult to completely say if it’s a myth or not, but vasectomy appointments don’t go up during March Madness at my practice,” said Dr. Ajay Nangia. “I’ve been doing vasectomies for 16 years and it’s not like I’m suddenly getting inundated for requests on the Friday of March Madness.”
Dr. Nangia, who volunteers for the Urology Care Foundation, is an Associate Professor of Urology at the University of Kansas Medical Center. For the record, Kansas is home to some of the most loyal college basketball fans in America. The Kansas Jayhawks were a No. 1 seed in the 2016 tournament and they won it all in 2008.
Other popular sporting events rumored to cause a rise in vasectomy requests include the Olympics, World Cup and Masters (golf tournament). None of this has ever been proven in a study, according to Dr. Nangia.
“I don’t think anyone’s ever published a study on it,” Dr. Nangia said. “If there were to be a study, it shouldn’t be based on one practice.”
The American Urological Association (AUA) has never reported any data linking March Madness, or other sporting event, to an increased number of vasectomies performed. However, a report from CNN in 2014 quoted Dr. Ed Sabanegh, chairman of the Department of Urology at the Cleveland Clinic, as saying his practice performs about 50% more vasectomies in March.
Dr. Nangia thinks the idea that “vasectomy appointments skyrocket in March” might be an illusion. He explained that since many practices promote getting vasectomies in March (i.e., giving away free pizza coupons with appointments) it may simply just feel as though more men are undergoing the procedure in March. Until a study is done to find out if U.S. men line up in droves for a vasectomy during March Madness, we may never know for sure.
Learn more about vasectomy
However…if you do want to have your vasectomy during March Madness…we’ll happily we’ll make it happen! Contact us 24/7 and leave your number and we’ll call for an appointment.
Here is a helpful collection of interesting facts and points of information about vasectomy:
Leave your number and we’ll call you to set up a consultation!

Urology – September 30, 2013 – Vol. 30 – No. 10
Article Reviewed: Compliance With Semen Analysis. Duplisea J, Whelan T: J Urol; 2013;189 (June): 2248-2251.