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- Title
Diagnosis and treatment of epididymal tuberculosis: a review of 47 cases.
- Authors
Jiangwei Man; Lei Cao; Zhilong Dong; Junqiang Tian; Zhiping Wang; Li Yang
- Abstract
Objective: To analyze the clinical manifestations, diagnosis and treatment outcomes in a series of patients with epididymal tuberculosis. Methods: This study is a retrospective data analysis of 47 cases of histologicallyconfirmed epididymal tuberculosis in patients treated at our hospital from November 2012 to December 2018. Results: The average age of the patients was approximately 42 years. The epididymal lesion location was left-sided in 15 patients (31.9%), right-sided in 22 patients (46.8%) and bilateral in 10 patients (21.3%). The main symptoms were painless swelling of the scrotum in 21 cases (44.7%) and scrotal drop pain in 21 cases (44.7%). Scrotal physical examination revealed epididymal beaded enlargement in 12 patients (25.5%), testicular mass in one patient (2.1%), scrotal tenderness alone in seven patients (14.9%), ill-defined epididymal-testicular border in 21 patients (44.7%) and sinus formation in six patients (12.8%). After 2-4 weeks of anti-tuberculosis chemotherapy, the patients underwent a surgical procedure. We found that 10 (83.3%) of the 12 patients whose main symptom was epididymal beaded enlargement underwent simple epididymal surgery. Of the 21 patients whose main clinical manifestation was ill-defined testis-epididymis demarcation, 16 (72.2%) underwent epididymis-testicular surgery. All patients underwent postoperative chemotherapy for 3-6 months. Postoperative follow-up showed good response to treatment. Conclusion: It is difficult to diagnose early-stage epididymal tuberculosis. Epididymal tuberculosis is likely to have invaded surrounding tissues when signs such as epididymal beaded changes and ill-defined epididymis-testis border are present. Surgical treatment combined with preoperative and postoperative chemotherapy is an effective approach to treating this condition.
- Subjects
SCROTUM; TUBERCULOSIS; OPERATIVE surgery; TUBERCULOSIS patients; SPINAL tuberculosis; TREATMENT effectiveness
- Publication
PeerJ, 2020, p1
- ISSN
2167-8359
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.7717/peerj.8291