Interstitial compartment pathology and spermatogenic disruption in testes from impotent diabetic men

Abstract
Studies utilizing animal models of diabetes suggest that diabetic complications of impotence involve structural lesions in the testis as part of an overall defect in the pituitary-testicular axis. In the present study testicular biopsies from ten oligospermic and/or impotent men with diabetes were evaluated by light and electron microscopy. One biopsy was judged normal. The remaining tissue showed variable testicular pathology ranging from minimally to grossly affected. Seminiferous tubules had decreased tubule diameters, hyalinized tubule walls, and occluded lumina owing either to epithelial encroachment or cellular debris and exfoliated round germ cells. Sertoli cells were vacuolated and showed a high degree of apical cell membrane redundancy and degeneration. Although Sertoli-Sertoli cell junctional complexes appeared normal, Sertoli junctional specializations associated with spermatids were structurally abnormal or absent. All tubules were variably depleted of adluminal compartment germ cell types. The interstitial compartment was filled with a collagen-rich extracellular matrix concentrated around small blood vessels and seminiferous tubule walls. Capillaries and lymphatic endothelia appeared structurally abnormal and compromised by the interstitial “matrix expansion.” Some Leydig cells contained a variable number of small to large lipid droplets, vacuoles, and secondary lysosomes. Results indicate the presence of tissue pathology in testes of impotent diabetic men. Discrete ultrastructural lesions in apical Sertoli cell cytoplasm are associated with spermatogenic disruption and morphological changes in the interstitial compartment suggest microvascular complications.