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Epididymitis Swollen, sore and infected Definitions • Epididymitis – inflammation of the epididymis usually as a result of bacterial or viral infection, rarely as a result of trauma or urinary reflux from the urethra[1] • Epididymo-orchitis – inflammation of both the testis and epididymis[1] • Orchitis – inflammation of testis due to trauma, ischaemia, metastasis, mumps or infection elsewhere in the body[1] Anatomy Review Epididymitis • Acute – pain and swelling < 6 weeks • Subacute – pain and swelling 6 weeks – 3 months • Chronic – pain > 3 months can be subdivided – inflammatory, obstructive and epididmyalgia[2] Incidence • 13 cases per 10,000 Australian male patient encounters at the GP[3] • 31 per 10,000 in age cohort 25 – 29 years[3] • Similar in the UK[4] • 24 per 10,000 for all ages • 27 per 10,000 for the 25 – 34 year old cohort Aetiology • No exact causes identified • Urinary reflux (congenital, mechanical) • Presence of infectious agent • STI vs Urologic Pathogen[5] Bugs Bugs Bugs • Bacteria[5] • • • • • Enteric bacteria (Pseudomonas and E Coli) Tuberculosis Syphilis Gonorrhoea Chlamydia • Viruses • • • • Coxsackie A6 virus (hand, foot and mouth disease)[6] Enterovirus and adenovirus [5] Hepatitis B [7] Mumps [8] Other Aetiologies • Trauma • Obstruction secondary to vasectomy • Fungal infections such as candida and histoplasmosis • Rheumatic conditions • Parasitic infection such as trichomoniasis and schistosomiasis [5] • Can be amiodarone induced [9] • Posterior urethral valves in children [10] • Xanthogranulomatous inflammation [11, 12] Pathophysiology • Infection limited by segmental nature of epididymis[13] • Unilateral in acute setting with bilateral impact on spermatogenesis[14] • Bilateral in chronic setting • Abscess • Segmental infarction[15] • Fertility impact • 6 – 7% azoospermia, 22 – 37% oligospermia[14] Diagnostic Criteria – Physical Signs[5] • Pain – location of pain • Swelling – induration of scrotal sac • Surgical history • Sexual history Diagnostic Criteria – Biochemical • Urinalysis • Urine culture / gram staining of urethral discharge • Haematology – WCC and CRP • No specific serum inflammatory marker has yet been discovered for epididymitis though work continues[16] • Semen culture no longer necessary Ultrasound of Epididymitis - Acute • Increased PSV of testicular artery on affected side versus normal side[17] • Epididymis / testis is thickened / enlarged • Echotexture may be heterogeneous and hypoechoic • Increased vascularity compared to surroundings under Doppler interrogation • Reactive hydrocele[17] Acute Features Heterogeneous Echotexture Reactive Hydrocoele Increased Vascularity Ultrasound of Epididymitis – Chronic • Thickened epididymis / testis / tunica vaginalis • Induration of scrotal wall • Heterogeneous echotexture • Coarse calcifications • Testicular infarct – wedge shaped hypoechoic area [15] Utility of Ultrasound • Exclusion of testicular torsion / mass • Visualise extent of disease progress – abscess formation / secondary infarction • Follow up of epididymitis – success of treatment References 1. Taber's Cyclopedic Medical Dictionary. 22nd ed. Cyclopedic Medical Dictionary, ed. D. Venes. 2013, Philadelphia: F.A. Davis Co. 2. Shoskes, D.A., Urological Men’s Health : A Guide for Urologists and Primary Care Physicians. Current Clinical Urology, ed. E.A. Klein. 2012, Totowa, NJ: Springer: Humana Press. 3. Chen, M.Y., et al., Trends in clinical encounters for pelvic inflammatory disease and epididymitis in a national sample of Australian general practices. International Journal of STD & AIDS, 2006. 17(6): p. 384-386. 4. Nicholson, A., et al., Management of epididymo-orchitis in primary care: results from a large UK primary care database. The British Journal of General Practice, 2010. 60(579): p. e407e422. 5. Michel, V., et al., Epididymitis: revelations at the convergence of clinical and basic sciences. Asian Journal of Andrology, 2015. 17(5): p. 756 - 763. 6. Vuorinen, T., et al., Epididymitis Caused by Coxsackievirus A6 in Association with Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease. Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 2014. 52(12): p. 4412-4413. 7. Aydin, Ö.A., et al., An Unusual Extrahepatic Manifestation of Acute Hepatitis B Infection: Epididymitis. Viral Hepatit Dergisis, 2014. 20(2). 8. Doyle, J.S., E.K. Paige, and D.W. Spelman, Mumps presenting as epididymo-orchitis among young travellers: under-recognition, missed diagnoses and transmission risks. The Medical journal of Australia, 2011. 194(6): p. 317. 9. Nikolaou, M., et al., Amiodarone-induced epididymitis: A case report and review of the literature. International Journal of Cardiology, 2007. 121(1): p. e15-e16. 10. Kwong, J., et al., Bilateral Epididymitis in a Child With Undiagnosed Posterior Urethral Valves. Urology, 2013. 82(1): p. 225-227. 11. Ezer, S.S., et al., Xanthogranulomatous Orchiepididymitis: A Very Uncommon Cause of Scrotal Mass in Childhood. Urology, 2013. 82(1): p. 228-230. 12. Repetto, P., et al., Bilateral xanthogranulomatous funiculitis and orchiepididymitis in a 13-year-old adolescent boy. Journal of Pediatric Surgery, 2012. 47(10): p. e33-e35. 13. Stammler, A., et al., Epididymitis: ascending infection restricted by segmental boundaries. Human Reproduction, 2015. 30(7): p. 1557-1565. 14. Rusz, A., et al., Influence of urogenital infections and inflammation on semen quality and male fertility. World Journal of Urology, 2012. 30(1): p. 23-30. 15. Pearl, M.S. and M.C. Hill, Ultrasound of the Scrotum. Seminars in Ultrasound, CT and MRI, 2007. 28(4): p. 225-248. 16. Pilatz, A., et al., Clinical evaluation of human epididymis protein 4 as a biomarker for epididymitis. Biomarkers in Medicine, 2012. 6(3): p. 311-7. 17. Pilatz, A., et al., Acute epididymitis in ultrasound: Results of a prospective study with baseline and follow-up investigations in 134 patients. European Journal of Radiology, 2013. 82(12): p. e762-e768. Thank You