Testicular and Prostate Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

What is the most common congenital male reproductive abnormality?

A

Cryptorchidism (~1% of male infants)

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2
Q

What can commonly cause orchitis?

A
  • Chlamydia trachomatis (D-K) or Neisseria gonorrhoea
  • E coli, Pseudomonas (UTI associated - older)
  • Mumps virus (kids > 10 years)
  • Autoimmune orchitis (granulomas involving seminiferous tubules)
  • TB (necrotizing granulomas)
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3
Q

What is Prehn sign and what does it prove?

A
  • Pain relief with scrotal elevation

- Prehn +ve = epididymitis

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4
Q

What kind of infarction is in testicular torsion?

A

Hemorrhagic infarction

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5
Q

What congenital failure may cause testicular torsion?

A

Congenital failure of testes to attach to inner lining of scrotum

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6
Q

What pathology is varicocele associated with?

A

Left-sided renal cell carcinoma

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7
Q

What does varicocele present with?

A

Scrotal swelling with bag of worms appearance

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8
Q

What is hydrocele?

A

Fluid collection within tunica vaginalis

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9
Q

What is hydrocele caused by in infants?

A

Congenital hydrocele is caused by an incomplete obliteration of processus vaginalis

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10
Q

What is hydrocele caused by in adults?

A

Secondary to infection, trauma, tumor

- Blockage of lymphatic drainage

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11
Q

What does hydrocele present as?

A

Scrotal swelling that can be transluminated

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12
Q

What can varicocele be treated with?

A
  • Surgical ligation or embolization
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13
Q

How is testicular torsion treated?

A
  • Surgical correction (orchiopexy) within 6 hrs

- Manual detorsion if surgical option unavailable in timeframe

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14
Q

When does orchiopexy need to be performed (time-frame)?

A

Within 6 hours

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15
Q

What maneuver may diagnose varicocele =?

A

Valsalva (blowing whilst obstructing mouth and nose)

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16
Q

What is spermatocele?

A

Cyst due to dilated epidydimal duct or rete testis

17
Q

What is acute prostatitis due to?

A

Acute inflammation of the prostate usually due to bacteria

- N gonnorhoea or C trachomatis

18
Q

What does acute prostatitis present with and what does it show on examination?

A
  • Dysuria
  • Fever and chills
  • Tender and boggy on DRE
19
Q

What does prostatitis secretions show?

A
  • WBCs

- Cultures show bacteria in acute, cultures are negative in chronic

20
Q

What does chronic prostatitis present with?

A
  • Dysuria

- Pelvic or low back pain

21
Q

What is bph?

A
  • Hyperplasia of prostatic stroma and glands
22
Q

Is there an increased risk of prostate cancer with bph?

A

No

23
Q

What areas does BPH affect?

A
  • Periurethral zone of prostate

- Lateral lobes, anterior lobe, middle lobe (NOT posterior lobe)

24
Q

What lobe is affected by prostate cancer?

A

Posterior lobe (peripheral zone)

25
Q

What can chronic prostatitis be due to?

A
- Bacterial 
Non -bacterial
- Secondary to previous infection 
- Nerve problems 
- Chemical irritation
26
Q

What are the treatment options for BPH?

A
  • Finasteride (5-a reductase inhibitor)
  • Tamsulosin, terzosin (a1 antagonist)
  • Tadalafil (PDE-5 inhibitors)
  • Surgical resection (TURP, ablation)
27
Q

How is prostatic adenocarcinoma graded?

A

Gleason grade

- Based on glandular architecture - correlates w. metastatic potential

28
Q

What are signs/symptoms of prostatic adenocarcinoma metastasis?

A
  • Lower back pain

- Increased serum ALP and PSA

29
Q

What does metastasis to the spine occur via?

A

Batson (vertebral) venous plexus

30
Q

What are useful tumor markers for prostatic adenocarcinoma?

A
  • PAP - prostatic acid phosphatase

- PSA - prostate specific antigen

31
Q

What kind of biopsy for prostate?

A

needle core biopsies

- Transrectal