Epididymo-orchitis is a common intra-scrotal inflammation among males that causes swelling of the epididymis and testis. In the era of modern antibiotics, complications associated with this condition are now rare. Herein, we report a 28-year-old man with acute epididymo-orchitis complicated by the formation of several abscesses involving the left testis and seminal vesicles. The literature review showed this patient as the first case with such extensive complications following epididymo-orchitis. Initial antimicrobial therapy was unable to resolve the condition. The management necessitated surgical intervention, which included MRI-guided aspiration of the seminal vesicle abscesses and testicular sparing drainage of the testicular abscess.
Non-obstructive azoospermia (NOA) is the most difficult form of male infertility to manage. It usually requires sperm retrieval from the testis, which is most challenging due to sperm rarity. Here, we describe the recovery of testicular sperms that had been missing and whose original retrieval results were negative. Salvage microsurgical testicular sperm extraction and sperm testing were performed on a 36-year-old male with NOA. Neither in the operation room nor after an inspection in the embryology laboratory were any sperm detected. The obtained tissue was advised to be frozen because the patient data and surgical microscopy predicted a favorable outcome, and the tissue processing was done in an inappropriate environment. About 1 month later, the specimen was thawed, crushed, and re-examined. Successful oocyte fertilization resulted from an effective detection of sperms and their direction to intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection. This is the first case report that, to the best of our knowledge, describes the stepwise laboratory processing of testicular tissue and its capacity to recover lost sperms in challenging NOA cases and under less-than-ideal working conditions.
We report a case of a post-aspiration giant unilocular spermatocele in a young man. A 27-year-old man sought medical advice for a huge right scrotal swelling. The swelling first appeared following scrotal trauma and was aspirated. Shortly after, it reappeared and persisted for several years with a sense of heaviness, infrequent periods of right scrotal pain, and cosmetic concerns. Ultrasonography of the scrotum revealed a huge fluid cyst pushing the testis antero-inferiorly in the right hemi-scrotum. Scrotal exploration suggested the spermatocele nature of the cyst that emerged from the head of the epididymis. The cyst was excised, and its fluid content and wall underwent pathological examination for confirmation.
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