Disease Name
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History and Symptoms
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Physical Examination
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Lab Findings
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Imaging Findings
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Gross and Histologic Findings
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Genetic Studies / Immunohistochemistry
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Germ Cell Tumors
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Seminoma
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- Most common
- 30-50 year-old with painless unilateral testicular mass or mild discomfort
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- Palpable, nontender unilateral testicular mass
- Usually homogeneous enlargement
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- Elevated serum placental ALP (PALP)
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- 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
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- 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
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- Stains positively for ALP, c-KIT, CD30, EMA, and glycogen
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Embryonal cell carcinoma
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- Young adults
- Painful testicular mass
- Manifests with early mestastasis (bone, lung, CNS)
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- Often unremarkable (small primary tumor)
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- Elevated serum hCG
- Elevated serum AFP, when mixed
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- Variable echogenicity (usually hypoechoic on ultrasound)
- No differentiating features on imaging
- Commonly invade the surrounding structures (tunica albuginea)
- Irregular calcifications
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- Pale-grey mass with areas of hemorrhagic and necrosis
- Often mixed histopathological features (solid, papillary, tubular, pseudoglandular)
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- Stains positively for CD30 and hCG stain
- May stain positively for AFP, when mixed
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Yolk sac tumor
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- Most common testicular cancer in children less than 3 years of age
- Rapidly growing unilateral mass in an infant or a young child
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- Palpable, nontender unilateral testicular mass
- Usually heterogeneous enlargement
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- Diffuse enlargement of the testis with a heterogeneous appearance on ultrasound
- Areas of hemorrhage and necrosis on MRI
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- 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)
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- Stains positively for AFP, alpha-1-antitrypsin, PAS diastase
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Teratoma
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- Bimodal distribution of age (infants and middle aged adults)
- Painless tumor
- History of congenital disease (Down syndrome, klinefelter, spina bifida)
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- Palpable, nontender unilateral testicular mass
- Usually heterogeneous enlargement
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- Elevated serum hCG
- Elevated serum AFP
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- Heterogeneous, cystic appearance with mucinous or sebaceous depositions
- Variable echogenicity on ultrasound
- Calcifications usually irregular
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- Large, heterogeneous appearance with solid, cystic, mucoid, and/or cartilageanous components
- Presence of at least 2 germ layers
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- Chromosome 12p mutations
- Stains positively for cytokeratin. hCG, and AFP
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Teratocarcinoma
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