Table Of Contents
Epididymitis
Epididymitis is inflammation of the epididymis. Classified into acute, chronic (> 6 weeks), and recurrent epididymitis. It is a clinical diagnosis. Acute epididymitis is usually infectious (following UTI or STI), whereas chronic epididymitis is due to untreated acute epididymitis, tuberculosis, or rarely non-infectious causes
Epididymitis is common between 20 – 39 years of age
- Risk factors
- Instrumentation (indwelling catheters)
- Anatomic abnormalities
- Prostatic hypertrophy (older men)
- Posterior urethral valves (children)
- Excessive physical exertion
- Causes
- Acute epididymitis
- UTI (Older men and children, E. coli, Pseudomonas, Proteus, Klebsiella)
- STI (young males < 35 yo, Chlamydia, Neisseria, Treponema, Trichomonas, Gardnerela)
- Chronic epididymitis
- Recurrent or untreated acute epididymitis
- Tuberculosis (renal TB)
- Non-infectious causes (Amiodarone-induced, Behcet disease)
- Acute epididymitis
- Signs and symptoms
- Unilateral scrotal pain (bilateral in 5-10%)
- Radiates to the flank
- Scrotal swelling
- Tenderness along the posterior testis
- Positive Prehn sign
- Low-grade fever (esp. children)
- LUTS (dysuria, frequency, urgency)
- Urethral discharge (urethritis)
- Blood in semen
- Pain and discomfort in the lower abdomen or pelvis
- Inguinal lymphadenopathy
- Unilateral scrotal pain (bilateral in 5-10%)
- Investigation
- Urinalysis and Culture (MSU)
- Bacteriuria
- Puria
- NAAT: For chlamydia and Gonorrhoes (first voided urine or urethral swab)
- Scrotal ultrasound: to rule out testicular torsion
- Complete blood count
- Leukocytosis
- Retrograde urethrography
- To assess the integrity of the urethra
- Urinalysis and Culture (MSU)
- Treatment
- Suspected UTI source
- Fluoroquinolone (Levofloxacin)
- Suspected STI source
- Ceftriaxone IM STAT + Doxycycline for 10-14 days
- Pain management
- Analgesia
- NSAIDs
- Scrotal elevation
- Ice compress
- Surgical intervention for abscesses and chronic epididymitis
- Suspected UTI source
Orchitis
Orchitis is inflammation of the testis. Commonly occurs together with epididymitis as epididymal-orchitis.
- Signs and symptoms
- Sudden onset fever, nausea, vomiting
- Swollen and tender affected testes
- Complications
- Atrophy
- Hypofertility