Abstract: | A young boy who presents with an acutely painful scrotum can be a diagnostic challenge to his physician. It is important to differentiate the various causes of this symptom and to institute prompt management. Failure to do so could jeopardize the patient''s future fertility. In a review of 113 consecutive cases of a painful scrotum at a children''s hospital, torsion of the testicle was found in 51 patients (45%). Torsion of the appendix testis was found in 40 patients (35%) and acute epididymitis, once considered rare in children, was diagnosed in 17 (15%). The importance of prompt diagnosis of torsion is emphasized. The clinical diagnosis of the acutely painful scrotum is notoriously difficult, and in this series of cases surgical exploration was required in 92%. Only 2 of the 17 cases of epididymitis were associated with a bacterial urinary tract infection. |