Disease Name
|
History and Symptoms
|
Physical Examination
|
Lab Findings
|
Imaging Findings
|
Gross and Histologic Findings
|
Genetic Studies / Immunohistochemistry
|
Germ Cell Tumors
|
Seminoma
|
- Most common
- 30-50 year-old with painless unilateral testicular mass or mild discomfort
|
- Palpable, nontender unilateral testicular mass
- Usually homogeneous enlargement
|
- Elevated serum placental ALP (PALP)
|
- Hypoechogenic intratesticular well-defined mass on ultrasound with internal blood flow on Doppler ultrasound
- Cysts and calcificications are uncommon
- Hypointense lesion with inhomogeneous enhancement on MRI
- Homogeneous when small and heterogeneous when large
|
- Grey-white homogeneous mass with a lobular appearance
- Fried egg appearance on histopathology (large cells and clear cytoplasm)
- Prominent lymphocytic infiltration and less commonly, granulomatous formation
|
- Stains positively for ALP, c-KIT, CD30, EMA, and glycogen
|
Embryonal cell carcinoma
|
- Young adults
- Painful testicular mass
- Manifests with early mestastasis (bone, lung, CNS)
|
- Often unremarkable (small primary tumor)
|
- Elevated serum hCG
- Elevated serum AFP, when mixed
|
- Variable echogenicity (usually hypoechoic on ultrasound)
- No differentiating features on imaging
- Commonly invade the surrounding structures (tunica albuginea)
- Irregular calcifications
|
- Pale-grey mass with areas of hemorrhagic and necrosis
- Often mixed histopathological features (solid, papillary, tubular, pseudoglandular)
|
- Stains positively for CD30 and hCG stain
- May stain positively for AFP, when mixed
|
Yolk sac tumor
|
- Most common testicular cancer in children less than 3 years of age
- Rapidly growing unilateral mass in an infant or a young child
|
- Palpable, nontender unilateral testicular mass
- Usually heterogeneous enlargement
|
|
- Diffuse enlargement of the testis with a heterogeneous appearance on ultrasound
- Areas of hemorrhage and necrosis on MRI
|
- Yellow, mucinous, non-encapsulated, heterogeneous mass with areas of necrosis and hemorrhage
- Patterns that resemble embryonal structures (yolk sac, allantois) with reticular, papillary, or elongated forms
- Schiller-Duval bodies (perivascular structures)
|
- Stains positively for AFP, alpha-1-antitrypsin, PAS diastase
|
Teratoma
|
- Bimodal distribution of age (infants and middle aged adults)
- Painless tumor
- History of congenital disease (Down syndrome, klinefelter, spina bifida)
|
- Palpable, nontender unilateral testicular mass
- Usually heterogeneous enlargement
|
- Elevated serum hCG
- Elevated serum AFP
|
- Heterogeneous, cystic appearance with mucinous or sebaceous depositions
- Variable echogenicity on ultrasound
- Calcifications usually irregular
|
- Large, heterogeneous appearance with solid, cystic, mucoid, and/or cartilageanous components
- Presence of at least 2 germ layers
|
- Chromosome 12p mutations
- Stains positively for cytokeratin. hCG, and AFP
|
Teratocarcinoma
|
- Middle aged adult with painless testicular mass of mild discomfort
- May manifest with features of metastasis
|
- Palpable, nontender unilateral testicular mass
- Usually heterogeneous enlargement
|
- Elevated serum hCG
- Elevated serum AFP
|
- Variable echogenicity on ultrasound
|
- Features of both teratoma and embryonal carcinoma (more common) or both teratoma and choriocarcinoma (less common)
- Solid and cystic components with mucoid, cartilagenous, sebaceous gland, myxoid stroma components
- Additional features of underlying embryonal carcinoma or choriocarcinoma
|
- Stains positively for cytokeratin. hCG, AFP, and CD30
|
Choriocarcinoma
|
- Adolescent or young adult with extratesticular symptoms
- Mass is small and locally asymptomatic
- Manifests with early metastasis and signs of hemorrhage (hemorrhagic stroke, hyperthyroidism, cannon-ball metastasis in lung, liver involvement, neurological deficits)
|
- Often unremarkable (small primary tumor)
|
|
- Variable echogenicity
- No differentiating features on imaging
- Commonly invade the surrounding structures (tunica albuginea)
|
- Prominent areas of hemorrhage and necrosis
- Nest and sheet pattern that simultaneously includes both cytotrophoblast and syncytiotrophoblast (rarely pure)
- Paucity of intermediate trophoblasts (unlike placental site trophoblastic tumor)
|
- Stains positively for hCG
|
Diffuse embryoma
|
- 20-25 yo man with painful testicular mass
|
|
- Elevated serum hCG
- Elevated serum AFP
|
- Poorly-defined, heterogeneous hyperechoic mass on ultrasound
|
- Non-encapsulated mass
- Intermingled (lace-like) embryonal carcinoma and yolk sac components in equal proportions, but no discrete embyoid bodies
- Scattered trophoblastic components
- Necklace-like arrangement of cells
|
- Stains positively for cytokeratin, AFP (yolk sac component), and CD30 (embyonal component)
|
Polyembryoma
|
- 20-25 yo man with painful testicular mass
|
|
- Elevated serum AFP
- Elevated serum hCG
|
- Poorly-defined, heterogeneous hyperechoic mass on ultrasound
|
- Multiple discrete embyoid bodies (combination of both embryonal carcinoma and yolk sac components)
|
- Stains positively for cytokeratin, AFP (yolk sac component), and CD30 (embyonal component)
|
Placental site trophoblastic tumor
|
- Infant or young adult
- Painful small testicular mass
|
- Small nontender or minimally painful testicular mass
|
|
- Variable echogenicity
- No differentiating features on imaging
- May have vascular flow
|
- Solid yellowish mass that resembles uterine tissue
- Less prominent foci of hemorrhage and ncerosis
- Predominance of intermediate trophoblast cells (implantation-site type) that invade surrounding blood vessels
- Paucity of cytotrophoblast and syncytiotrophoblast cells (unlike choriocarcinoma)
|
- Stains positively for hPL (diffuse), cytokeratin, AFP, and hCG (patchy)
- Negative p63 staining
|
Epithelioid trophoblastic tumor
|
- Infant or young adult
- Painful small testicular mass
|
- Small nontender or minimally painful testicular mass
|
|
- Variable echogenicity
- No differentiating features on imaging
- May have vascular flow
|
- Solid yellowish mass that resembles uterine tissue
- Less prominent foci of hemorrhage and ncerosis
- Predominance of intermediate trophoblast cells (implantation-site type) that invade surrounding blood vessels
- Paucity of cytotrophoblast and syncytiotrophoblast cells (unlike choriocarcinoma)
|
- Stains positively for p63 (diffuse), p63, cytokeratin, AFP, and hCG (patchy)
- Negative hPL staining
|
Mixed germ cell tumor
|
- Typical age at diagnosis and other clinical features based on underlying components
|
- Physical exam findings based on underlying components
|
- Elevated serum hCG, AFP, and/or PALP dependeing on the underlying compoenents
|
- Imaging findings based on underlying components
|
- Histopathological findings based on underlying components
- Variable proportion of choriocarcinoma, embryonal cell carcinoma, yolk sac tumor, seminoma, and/or teratoma tissue
|
- May stain positively for any of CD30, hCG, AFP, ALP, c-KIT, CD30, EMA, alpha-1-antitrypsin, PAS diastase, and glycogen depending on underlying compoenents
|
Carcinoid (pure neuroendocrine neoplasm)
|
- Middle-aged and elderly adult
- Manifests as a minimally painful, rapidly growing mass
- May manifest as carcinoid syndrome
|
- Tender testicular mass
- Hydrocele or cryptorchidism
|
- Elevated serum and urine 5-HIAA if carcinoid syndrome present
|
- Unilateral, well-circumscribed mass without vascular invasion
- Solid and cystic appearance
- Mixed echogenicity on ultrasound
- Irregular calcifications
|
- Well-circumscribed, yellowish solid mass
- Occasional cystic masses
- Small acini, cord-forming rosettes, prominent cytoplasmic granularity
- Salt and pepper chromatic pattern
- Absent features of atypia
- Neurosecretory granules on electron microscopy
|
- Stains positively for cytokeratin, serotonin, chromogranin, synaptophysin, and CD56
|
PNET (Ewing's tumor of the testes)
|
- 30-50 yo man with rapidly enlarging mass
- Often metastatic at presentation
|
- Palpable, nontender unilateral testicular mass
|
|
- No differentiating features on imaging
- Vascular flow on Doppler
|
- Greyish necrotic mass of immature neural tissue
- Sheet-like / rosette distribution of small round blue tumor cells
- Neurosecretory granules on electron microscopy
|
- Stains positively for synaptophysin, NSE, chromogranin, CD99, GFAP, FLI1
- Split of EWS gene on chromosome 22
|
Sex-cord stromal tumors
|
Fibroma
|
- Middle-aged adult (range 20-70 years) with slowly-growing, painless testicular mass
- History of nevoid basal cell carcinoma (Gorlin syndrome)
|
- Palpable, nontender unilateral testicular mass
|
|
- Isoechoic mass on ultrasound with prominent acoustic shadowing (fibrous component)
- May be homogeneous or heterogeneous
- Margins often blended with the tunica albuginea
- No vascular flow on Dopper
|
- Well-circumscribed, often non-encapsulated solid pale yellow mass
- No hemorrhage, no necrosis
- Pure fibromatous features of collagenized plaques and spindle cells that synthesize collagen.
- Low cellularity
|
- Mutation in PTCH gene
- Positive staining for calretinin, inhibin, CD56, CD34, actin, vimectin
- Usually (but not always) negative staining for S-100, keratin, CD99/MIC-2, and desmin
|
Granulosa cell tumor
|
- Young or middle-aged adult (adult-type) or infant/child (juvenile-type) patient with slowly-enlarging painless testicular mass
- May manifest with symptoms of metastasis or hormonal secretion (e.g. gynecomastia in estrogen-secreting tumors)
|
- Palpable, nontender unilateral testicular mass
|
|
- Hypoechoic mass with solid and cystic appearance on ultrasound (swiss-cheese appearance)
|
- Well-circumscribed tumor between the seminiferous tubules
- May be solid, cystic, of lobular
- Pseudo-capsule
- No hemorrhage, no necrosis
- Elongated grooved nuclei (coffee-bean appearance)
- Call-Exner bodies
- Variable atypia
|
- Stains positively for calretinin, inhibin, vimentin, actin, and MIC2
|
Leydig (interstitial) cell tumor
|
- Bimodal age distribution
- Slowly enlarging painless unilateral mass
|
- Palpable, nontender unilateral testicular mass
- Signs of excess estradiol (e.g. gynecomastia)
|
|
- Well-defined, hypoechoic solid mass on ultrasound
- May have cystic component
- Irregular calcifications
|
- Well-circumscribed, unencapsulated solid mass
- Yellowish-brown tumor
- May have cystic, hemorrhagic, or necrotic areas
- Often dffuse growth of large polygonal Leydig cells, but may have unique patterns of growth
- Vacuolated cells with marked atypia
- Reinke crystals
- Psammoma bodies
|
- Mutation in fumarate hydratase
- Stains positively for inhibin, cytokeratin, calretinin, synaptophysin, vimentin, Melan-A
|
Sertoli hyperplasia (Sertoli adenoma, Pick's adenoma)
|
- Child or young adult with history of Peutz-Jegher syndrome, androgen insensitivity syndrome, or McCune Albright syndrome
- Slowly enlarging painless bilateral masses
|
- Palpable, nontender bilateral testicular masses
- Signs of excess estradiol (e.g. gynecomastia)
|
- Elevated serum estradiol
- Elevated anti-Mullerian hormone and inhibin B
- Reduced androgen concentration
|
- Hyperechogenic nodules on ultrasound
|
- Well-demarcated yellowish nodules in the testis
- Unencapsulated nodules composed of Sertoli cells
|
- Stains positively for anti-Mullerian hormone, inhibin A, CK8, and CK18
- Negative staining for AFP, hCG, and p53
|
Large cell calcifying Sertoli cell tumor
|
- Young patient with history of Carney syndrome, Peutz-Jeghers syndrome, or tuberous sclerosis
- Slowly enlarging painless unilateral/bilateral mass(es)
|
- Palpable, nontender unilateral or bilateral testicular mass
- Signs of excess estradiol (e.g. gynecomastia)
|
|
- Diffuse and regular (smooth, rounded, large) calcifications
- Variable appearance on ultrasound
- Often multiple hyperechogenic regions with strong shadowing
- Possible increased blood flow
|
- Multifocal, well-circumscribed yellowish-grey nodules
- Absent hemorrhage or necrosis
- Patterrns (sheet or trabeculae) of large cells and formation of solid tubules
- Psammoma bodies
- Charcot Bottcher crystals on electron microscopy
|
- Stains positively for inhibin, vimentin, calretinin, S100, and cytokeratin
- Negative staining for laminin, PALP, AFP, and hCG
|
Sclerosing Sertoli cell tumor
|
- Variable age at presentation (adolescence to elderly)
- Slowly enlarging painless unilateral mass
|
- Palpable, nontender unilateral testicular mass
|
|
- Well-circumscribed hypoechogenic lesion on ultrasound
|
- Well-circumscribed, yellowish-grey nodule
- Absent hemorrhage or necrosis
- Tubuules and cords of Sertoli cells surrounded by hypocellular collagenous strome (sclerosis)
|
- Stains positively for calretinin, inhibin, and vimentin
- Negative staining for cytokeratin, AFP, and hCG
|
Sertoli tumor, non-specific
|
- Bimodal age districution: either 40-50 year old man or infants with history of Carney syndrome or Peutz-Jegher syndrome
- Slowly enlarging testicular mass
|
- Palpable, nontender unilateral testicular mass
- Signs of excess estradiol (e.g. gynecomastia)
|
- Often unremarkable
- Elevated serum estradiol may be present, less common
|
- Well-circumscribed mass with variable echogenicity
|
- Well-circumscribed, yellowish-grey nodule
- Hemorrhage and necrosis may be present, but uncommon
- Features of fetal, prepubertal, and adult Sertoli cells present simultaneously
- Charcot Bottcher crystals on electron microscopy
|
- Stains positively for vimentin, cytokeratin, inhibin, S100, chromogranin, synaptophysin, and CD99
- Negative staining for hCG, AFP, and PLAP
|
Sertoli-Leylig cell tumor (SLCT)
|
- Young adult or phenotypic female with history of androgen insensitivity
- Slowly enlarging painless unilateral mass
|
- Palpable, nontender unilateral testicular mass
- Signs of excess estradiol (e.g. gynecomastia)
|
- Often unremarkable
- Elevated serum estradiol may be present, less common
- Abrnomally elevated testosterone among pts with androgen insensitivity
|
- Well-circumscribed mass with variable echogenicity
- Solid mass with intratumoral cysts may be present
|
- Heterogeneous, lobulated, encapsulated yellowish solid mass
- Mass contains combination of Sertoli cells and Leydig cells
- Poorly differentiated cells (immature tubules of Sertoli cells, large Leydig cells)
|
- Stains positively for inhibin, melanA, and CD99
- Negative staining for EMA, PLAP, and S100
|
Testicular tumor of andrenogenital syndrome (testicular adrenal rest tumor)
|
- Post-pubertal patient with history of congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH)
- Often asymptomatic, detected during screening in patients with CAH
|
- Unremarkable testicular exam
- Other signs of congenital adrenal hyperplasia
|
- Elevated 11-beta-hydroxylase activity
- Reduced concentrations of AFP, LDH, and hCG
|
- Uniform hypoechogenicity on ultrasound
- Usually multifocal and bilateral lesions
|
- Hyperplasia, bilateral lesions in testicular hilum
- Yellowish nodules
- Cells resemble adrenocortical cells, no mitoses
- Normal surrounding tissue
- Absent Reinke crystals
|
- Stains positively for CD56, synaptophysin, and inhibin
- Negative staining for androgen receptor protein
|
Other tumors
|
Lymphoma
|
- Elderly patient (>60 years) with history of lymphoma (commonly diffuse large B cell lymphoma)
- Unilateral or bilateral painless testicular mass
|
- Palpable, nontender unilateral or bilateral testicular mass
|
- Depends on lymphoma subtype
|
- Diffuse infiltration
- Hypoechoic solid masses on ultrasound
- Hypervascularity on Doppler ultrasound
|
- Whitish-tan colored mass
- Large, pleomorphic malignant cells
- Seminiferous tubules may be spared or undergo sclerosis
- Vascular invasion
|
- Stains positively for CD45
- Depends mainly on lymphoma subtype
- Usually negative staining for PLAP and SALL4
|
Angiosarcoma
|
- Bimodal age distribution
- Young man with history of teratoma or elderly man with history of radiation or chronic hydrocele
- Painless/painful testicular mass
|
- Tender or non-tender testicular mass
- Low-grade fever
- Scrotal swelling
- Flank pain
- Hydrocele
|
|
- Hypervascularity on Doppler ultrasound
|
- Solid vascular lesion
- Classical pattern of proliferating anastomosing blood-filled channels
- 2 patterns: solid (sheet proliferation without lumen) and primitive (small lumina filled withblood)
|
- Stains positively for CD31, CD34, lectin, and factor VIII-related antigen
- Negative staining for pancytokeratin, PLAP, CD45, CD68, CAM5.2, and AE1/AE3
|
Chondrosarcoma
|
- Young or middle-aged adult with history of teratoma
- Painless testicular mass
|
- Palpable, non-tender, heterogeneous mass
|
|
|
- Firm, grey mass with irregular lobulations
- Cartilaginous (chondroid) matrix surrounded by fibrovascular bands
- Most have non-cartilagenous components (rarely pure)
|
- Stains positively for S100
|
Hemangioma
|
- Painless testicular mass among pts of any age
|
- Palpable, non-tender, homogeneous mass
|
|
- Homogeneous hypoechoic mass
- Hypervascularity on Doppler ultrasound
|
- Well-defined hemorrhagic mass
- Red blood cells in tubules
|
- Stains positively for CD31, CD34, FLI1, and factor VIII-related antigen
- Negative staining for pancytokeratin, AE, keratin, PLAP, and EMA
|
Mesothelioma
|
- Middle aged man with painless testicular mass and history of hydrocele or exposure to asbestos
|
- Palpable, non-tender testicular mass
- Scrotal swelling
|
|
- Thickening of tunica vaginais
- Solid paratesticular mass
- Hydrocele
|
- May be benign or malignant
- Papillary patterns of uniform epithelioid cells with fibrovacular core
- Polygonal cells with microvilli on electron microscopy
- Psammoma bodies
|
- Benign: stains positively for p53 (focal) and CEA
- Malignant: Stains positively for calretinin, WT1, EMA, thrombomodulin, CK5, CK6, CK7 and negative staining for CEA and CK20
|
Plasmacytoma
|
- Adult (of any age) with concurrent or history of plasma cell neoplasia (commonly multiple myeloma)
- Symptoms of multiple myeloma (e.g. fatigue, back pain)
|
- Testicular exam unremarkable
|
- Lab findings of plasmacytosis (e.g. anemia, elevated creatinine, hypercalcemia)
- No specific lab finding for testicular involvement
|
- Poorly circumscribed hypoechoic lesions on ultrasound
- Hypervascularity on Doppler ultrasound
|
- Large, tan-yellow mass
- Areas of hemorrahge
- Atypical plasma cells
- Tubule effacement in the center and tubule sparing in the periphery
|
- Positive staining for EMA, CD45, CD79am CD138, kappa or lambda light chains, and other plasma cell markers
|
AIDS-related testicular cancer
|
- Commonly testicular lymphoma or germ cell tumor
- Patient with history of AIDS presents with testicular swelling or pain
- Systemic manifestations of underlying malignancy
|
- Palpable testicular mass that may be tender or non-tender
|
- Depends on underlying malignancy
|
- Depends on underlying malignancy
|
- Depends on underlying malignancy
|
- Depends on underlying malignancy
|
Non-neoplastic mass
|
Adrenal cortical rest
|
- Usually asymptomatic (incidental finding)
- Young man with scrotal swelling and dull pain
- History of congenital adrenal hyperplasia (hydroxylase deficiency)
|
|
- May be unremarkable
- If secretory, elevated concentration of adrenal hormone
|
- Heterogeneous, well-circumscribed hypoechoic mass on ultrasound
- No or minimal vascularity on Doppler
- No distinguishing features
|
- Well-circumscribed, small, round, orange-yellow nodule
- Adrenal cortical tissue with absence of adrenal medullary tissue
|
- Positive staining for markers of cortical adrenal tissue
|
Chylocele
|
- Scrotal swelling in a man with history of filariasis / elephantiasis
|
- Scrotal swelling
- Negative trans-illumination test
|
|
- Fluid collection surrounding the testes
|
- Milky chylous fluid (not waterry) on aspiration
- Usually no evidence of microfliariae in chylous fluid
- Abundant leukocytes
|
|
Cystic dysplasia
|
- Young child with history of renal agenesis / dysplasia
- May be unilateral or bilateral, painless testicular mass
|
- Palpable, non-tender testicular mass
|
|
- Irregular cystic spaces witht varying sizes
- Absence of solid or vascular components
|
- Varying cystic spaces
- Formation of incomplete connective tissue septa
- Cells resembling the normal adult rete testes
|
|
Dermoid cyst
|
- Young or middle aged adult with slowly growing painless mass
- Ruptured cyst may manifest with scrotal swelling, erythema, and pain
|
- Palpable, nontender unilateral testicular mass
- Usually heterogeneous enlargement
|
|
- Onioin-skin appearance on ultrasound
- Target-shape lesions with halo of hypoechonicity and central hyperechogenicity on ultrasound
- No vacular flow on Doppler
|
- Mature epithelial tissue
- May have hair (similar to teratoma)
- Keratin filled cyst
- Epidermal epithelium surrounded by pilosebaceious units
- Formation of lipogranulomas and microcalcifications
- Absence of atypia
|
- Absence of any mutation (normal 12p)
- Stains positively for cytokeratin
|
Epidermoid cyst (keratocyst)
|
- 10-40 yo
- Painless slowly growing testicular mass
- Ruptured cyst may manifest with scrotal swelling, erythema, and pain
|
- Palpable, non-tender testicular mass
- Usually heterogeneous enlargement
|
|
- Onioin-skin appearance on ultrasound
- Target-shape lesions with halo of hypoechonicity and central hyperechogenicity on ultrasound
- No vacular flow on Doppler
|
- Absence of dermal structures, such as hair, sebaceous glands etc. (found in dermoid cyst)
- Cyst with white keratin debris
- Lined by squamous epithelium
- Laminated keratin
- Granuloma when cyst ruptures
|
- Absence of any mutation (normal 12p)
|
Granulomatous orchitis
|
- 40-60 yo man with sudden-onset testicular tenderness and mass formation
- History of infection, sarcoidosis, or testicular trauma
|
- Tender testicular mass
- Fever
|
|
|
- Solid nodule
- Lymphocytic infiltration and formation of giant cells and macrophages
- Not true granuloma
|
|
Hematocele
|
- Scrotal mass in patients with history of testicular trauma, torsion, or increased bleeding tendency
|
- Scrotal swelling
- Negative trans-illumination test
|
|
- Fluid collection surrounding the testes
|
- Bloody fluid on aspiration
|
|
Hydrocele
|
- Scrotal mass in patients with history of testicular trauma or epidymitis
|
- Scrotal swelling
- Positive trans-illumination test
|
|
- Fluid collection surrounding the testes
|
- Clear fluid on aspiration
|
|
Macroorchidism
|
- History of fragile X syndrome, FSH secreting adenoma
|
- Large testicle (the testicle itself is large)
- Signs of underlying disease
|
- May have elevated hormone concentration (e.g. FSH) if secretory adenoma
|
- Large testicle, but normal architecture
|
- Normal testicular findings
|
|
Malakoplakia
|
- Young man with long-standing symptoms of orchi-epididymitis (pain, scrotal swelling)
- History of immunosuppression
|
- Palpable, tender testicular mass
- Scrotal swelling
- Erythema
|
- Positive culture results for bacterial infection (chronic inflammation)
|
- Hypoechogenic mass on ultrasound
- Increased vascularity on Doppler
|
- Soft yellow friable plaques (malakos=soft | plakos=plaques)
- Von Hansemann cells (large cells with abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm) and Michaelis-Gutmann bodies (intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies with owl eyes appearance)
|
|
Testicular vasculitits
|
- Middle aged man with history of polyarteritis nodosa (less commonly granulomatosis with polyangiomatosis, Henoch-Schonlein purpura, or giant cell arteritis)
- History of HBV or HIV
Painful testicular mass with intra-testicular hemorrhage
- Symptoms of underlying vasculitis
|
- Signs of underlying vasculitis
- Palpable, tender testicular mass
- Scrotal swelling if vasculitis includes extratesticular structures
|
|
- Heterogeneous, hypoechogenic lesion on ultrasound
- Inreased intralesional vascularity on Doppler
|
- Soft, dark red lesion with areas of hemorrhage
- Fibrinoid necrosis
- Vascular wall fibrosis
|
|
Fibrous proliferation (paratesticular fibrous pseudotumor)
|
- Patients of all ages (peak during young adulthood)
- Slowly growing painless unilateral scrotal masss
- History of genitourinary infection or trauma
|
- Palpable, non-tender scrotal mass
|
|
- Paratesticular mass between tunica layers
- Hypoechogenic solid mass on ultrasound
- No vascularity on Doppler
|
- Whitish mass with multinoduular thickening
- Collagen-rich fibrous tissue with increased fibroblasts
- Dystrophic calcifications
- No hemorrhage or necrosis
|
- Stains positiively for actin and keratin
- Negative staining for ALK-1, beta-catenin
|
Polyorchism (supranumerary testes)
|
- Often asymptomatic (incidental finding)
- Young patient with scrotal pain, swelling, hydrocele, varicocele
- Patients may present with testicular torsion
|
- Palpable, non-tender scrotal mass
- Scrotal swelling
- Testicular torsion manifests with excruciating testicular or pelvic pain, erythema, and swelling
|
|
- Isoechogenic scrotal mass
|
|
|
Spermatocele
|
- Young or middle aged adult with painless testicular or scrotal mass
|
- Homogeneous palpable non-tender testicular or scrotal mass
|
|
- Well-defined, homogeneous,, hypoechoic mass on ultrasound
- Increased vascular flow on Doppler
|
- Splenic tissue (red with clear boundaries)
- Occasional calcification, thrombi, or fibrosis
|
|
Splenogodal fusion syndrome (ectopic scrotal spleen)
|
- Child or adolescent with painless, left scrotal mass (not right) and history of perimelia (continuous subtype) or cardiac defect (discontinuous subtype)
|
- Homogeneous palpable non-tender scrotal mass
|
|
- Well-defined, homogeneous,, hypoechoic mass on ultrasound
- Increased vascular flow on Doppler
|
- Splenic tissue (red with clear boundaries)
- Occasional calcification, thrombi, or fibrosis
|
|
Varicocele
|
- Often asymptomatic
- Dull or sharp testicular pain that increases with standing or physical activity and improves when lying down
- History of infertility
|
- Scrotal mass and swelling
- Often left-sided
- Dilated, tortuous veins
- "Bag of worms" sensation upon palpation
|
|
- On ultrasound, CT/MRI, and venography, apperance of dilated pampiniform plexus veins with serpentine appearance is diagnostic
- Flow reversal (reflux) with Valsalva maneuver on Doppler
- Enhancement following administration of gadolinium on MRI
|
- Testicular atrophy in advanced cases
|
|
Testicular torsion
|
- Excruciating, acute, sharp testicular pain that radiates to the pelvis and abdomen
- Testicular swelling and pain
|
- Scrotal swelling and tenderness
|
|
- Focal/diffuse hypoechogenicity on ultrasound
- No blood flow on Doppler (vs. increased flow in infections)
- Scrotal wall thickening
|
---
|
|
Scrotal
|
Brucellosis
|
- Patient with history of exposure to cattle/sheep/goat/swine or animal products (milk, meat, cheese) presents with acute scrotal pain and swelling
- Undulant fever and night sweats (characteristic wet hay odor)
- Relapses common with similar symptoms
|
- Tender testicular mass
- Fever
- Hydrocele
|
- Elevated WBC count
- Positive serum STA test for brucellosis
- Elevated Brucella IgM and IgG antibodies
- Urine PCR positive for Brucella
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- Focal/diffuse hypoechogenicity on ultrasound
- Focal/diffusre increased blood flow on Doppler
- Scrotal wall thickening
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- Granulomatous inflammation with lymphocytic infiltration
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- Urethral Gram stain demonstrates Gram-negative diplococci
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Brucellosis
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- Patient with history of exposure to cattle/sheep/goat/swine or animal products (milk, meat, cheese) presents with acute scrotal pain and swelling
Undulant fever and night sweats (characteristic wet hay odor)
- Relapses common with similar symptoms
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- Tender testicular mass
- Fever
- Hydrocele
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- Elevated WBC count
- Positive serum STA test for brucellosis
- Elevated Brucella IgM and IgG antibodies
- Urine PCR positive for Brucella spp.
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- Focal/diffuse heterogeneous, hypoechoic intratesticular mass on ultrasound
- Focal/diffuse increased blood flow on Doppler
- Scrotal wall thickening
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- Abscess formation at diagnosis is common
- Grey-white mass suggestive of testicular atrophy
- Granulomatous inflammation with lymphocytic infiltration
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Gonorrhea infection
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- Patient with history of unprotected sexual intercourse presents with unilaterla testicular pain, swelling, and fever
- May be either acute or chronic
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- Tender testicular mass
- Fever
- Hydrocele
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- Elevated WBC count
- Gram-negative diplococci on urethral Gram stain
- Urine PCR positive for Gonorrhea
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- Focal/diffuse hypoechogenicity on ultrasound
- Focal/diffusre increased blood flow on Doppler
- Scrotal wall thickening
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- Granulomatous inflammation with lymphocytic infiltration
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- Urethral Gram stain demonstrates Gram-negative diplococci
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Histoplasma infection
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- Chronic testicular enlargement
- Patients may have systemic manifestations of histoplasmosis
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- Tender/non-tender testicular mass
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- Elevated WBC count and eosinophilia may be present (may be normal in chronic cases)
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- Focal/diffuse hypoechogenicity on ultrasound
- Focal/diffusre increased blood flow on Doppler
- Scrotal wall thickening
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- Caseating granuloma with giant cells
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- Yeast observed on silver stain
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Mumps
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- Post-pubertal man with recent manifestations of mumps (e.g. parotiditis, pancreatitis, arthritis, myocarditis, meningoencephalitis) presents with acute, unilateral painful testicular mass
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- Tender testicular mass
- Hydrocele
- Fever
- Parotiditis
- Rash
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- Elevated WBC
- Elevated paramyxovirus IgM and IgG
- Urine PCR positive for paramyxovirus
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- Focal/diffuse hypoechogenicity on ultrasound
- Focal/diffusre increased blood flow on Doppler
- Scrotal wall thickening
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- Non-specific interstitial edema, degenerative changes, vascular dilation
- Lymphocytic infiltration
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Pyogenic epididymo-orchitis
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- Patient with history of unprotected sexual intercourse presents with acute scrotal swelling and pain
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- Tender testicular mass
- Fever
- Hydrocele
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- Elevated WBC
- Bacterial growth on urethral swab specimin (usually E. coli)
- Urine PCR positive for offending bacterial agent
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- Focal/diffuse hypoechogenicity on ultrasound
- Focal/diffusre increased blood flow on Doppler
- Scrotal wall thickening
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- Abscess formation in advanced cases
- Non-specific interstitial edema, degenerative changes, vascular dilation
- Lymphocytic infiltration
- Grey-white mass suggestive of testicular atrophy
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Syphilis
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- Patient with long history of unprotected sexual intercourse presents with painful testicular swelling (tertiary syphilis)
- Often manifests as epidimo-orchitis that is resistant to conventional antibiotic therapy
- May have other systemic symptoms of tertiary syphilis
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- Irregular tender testicular mass
- Thickened epididymis
- Hydrocele
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- Positive syphilis serology (suggest latent syphilis)
- VDRL may be either positiive or negative
- Positive dark field microscopy from lesion content
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- Heterogeneous hypoechogenicity on ultrasound
- Solid and cystic appearance with areas of necrosis
- May have increased blood flow on Doppler
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- Discrete gummas on gross pathology
- Microscopic features of gumma (interstitial inflammation, lymphocytic and plasma cell infiltration, obliterative endorteritis (endoarteritis obliterans), perivascular cuffing)
- Spirochetes may occasionally be observed
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- May stain positively for silver-based methods (Warthin-Starry stain, Wright stain, Levaditi stain)
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Tuberculosis
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- Patient with history of tuberculosis presents with painless mass or chronically dull testicular discomfort
- Positive constitutional symptoms (weight loss, malaise)
- May be isolated or may be associated with other systemic symptoms of tuberculosis (e.g. lymphadenopathy, pulmonary lesions, renal involvement)
- May have concomitant involvement of other GU organs (e.g. prostate, seminal vesicles)
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- Irregular testicular mass
- May be tender or non-tender
- Thickened scrotal skin
- Hydrocele
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- Ejaculum may demonstrate positive acid fast bacilli (AFB) staining
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- Heterogeneous hypoechogenicity on ultrasound
- No/minimal blood flow on Doppler
- Hypointense lesion on T1WI MRI and hyperintense on T2WI MRI
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- Possible abscess formation
- Caseating necrosis
- Epithelioid cells and lymphocytic infiltration with presence of multinucleated giant cells
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- Positive acid fast bacilli staining
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