Urology: Testicular Torsion
Testicular Torsion
Definition
- Testis Twists on the Spermatic Cord & Occludes Blood Supply
- Surgical Emergency
Pathophysiology
- Most Commonly Twists Toward Midline
- Degree of Twisting Can Be 180-720 Degrees
- Peak Incidence at 15 Years Old
- Can Cause Permanent Injury After 8 Hours
- Can Cause Infertility (Even if Contralateral Testis is Normal)
Causes
- Trauma
- Vigorous Physical Activity
- Spontaneous
Presentation
- Acute Severe Testicular Pain
- Firm/Swollen Testicle
- Nausea/Vomiting
- Horizontal Lie of Testicle (“Bell Clapper” Deformity)
- Asymmetric High-Riding Testicle
- Absent Cremasteric Reflex
Diagnosis
- Generally Made on Physical Exam
- Doppler US Can Confirm
Treatment
- Initial Step: Immediate Detorsion in the ED
- Definitive Treatment: Bilateral Orchiopexy
- Deficient Fixation of the Gubernaculum is Generally a Bilateral Deficit with High Risk for Future Contralateral Torsion
- Torsion > 6 Hours Should Consider Incision of the Tunica Albuginea to Prevent Testicular Compartment Syndrome
Testicular Torsion 1
Testicular Torsion on US: Left Testicle Enlarged with Absent Flow on Doppler 2
References
- Shrivastava NS, Gopalaswamy C, Venugopal RM. Prenatal torsion of testis: a rare emergency. J Neonatal Surg. 2012 Apr 1;1(2):30. (License: CC BY-3.0)
- Kühn AL, Scortegagna E, Nowitzki KM, Kim YH. Ultrasonography of the scrotum in adults. Ultrasonography. 2016 Jul;35(3):180-97. (License: CC BY-NC-3.0)