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Urology  (Expert Forum)
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Re: extremely enlarged testis
Questions in the Urology forum are answered by Dr. Stephen Liroff, affiliated with the Henry Ford Hospital. Topics covered include benign prostate disease, penis curvature, cystisis, kidney stones, pediatric urology, prostate, sexual dysfunction, urinary tract infections (UTI), and urological cancers.

Re: extremely enlarged testis

by anonymous-user__0, Jan 01, 1995 12:00AM


Subject: Re: extremely enlarged testis

Forum: The Urology Forum


my friend has an extremely large testis. One is average sized but the other is the size of a mango/a male's fist/soft ball/medium potato...gettin the picture...it's hard and it has no room to move in the sac...it's a BIG-HARD mass...Too emabarrassed to ask him about it...what could it be?...oh, he's 22 and i guess he doesn't suffer from any pain.





Dear Mariah,
Scrotal masses may consist of infection (epididymo-orchitis), epididymal cyst,  fluid around the testicle (hydrocele), blood around the testicle (hematocele) or a tumor within the testicle.  Another cause of a scrotal mass which is not of testicular origin may be a hernia in which a loop of bowel has migrated from the abdomen into the scrotum.  To determine if the mass is inside the testicle, a physical exam and  possibly an ultrasound of the scrotum should be performed.  
A patient with a solid, firm, intra-testicular mass is testicular cancer until proven otherwise.  The cancer is usually painless.  It most commonly affects 20-40 year old men.  Whites are affected 3 X more than blacks.  Risk factors include prior testicular tumor and cryptorchidism (undescended testis).  Your friend should see a Urologist as soon as possible for evaluation.  
More individualized care is available at the Henry Ford Hospital and its urban campuses by calling  (1 800 653 6568). We can also arrange local accommodations through this number if this is your need. Please bring any physicians' notes and lab test results that you  may be able to obtain. These will help us greatly.
HFHS M.D.-JL
*keyword: scrotal mass, testicular cancer








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