CASE 15235 Published on 28.11.2017

A rare cause of acute scrotal pain in a 37-year-old

Section

Uroradiology & genital male imaging

Case Type

Clinical Cases

Authors

Dr. Bossu Nicolas, Prof. Dr. Oyen Raymond

UZ Leuven, Gasthuisberg; Herestraat 49 3000 Leuven, Belgium; Email:bossu.nicolas@gmail.com
Patient

37 years, male

Categories
Area of Interest Genital / Reproductive system male ; Imaging Technique Ultrasound-Colour Doppler
Clinical History
A 37-year-old male patient with a history of antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) associated with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) presented with acute left testicular and inguinal pain that arose spontaneously with no other associated symptoms. Physical examination showed moderate pain on palpation of the left testicle. Laboratory findings were normal except mild leucocytosis.
Imaging Findings
Longitudinal ultrasonographic view of the right and left testicle showing hypoechoic avascular upper pole of left testicle, arrows indicating the abrupt change in echogenicity between upper and lower pole of the left testicle. Doppler ultrasound (US) of the testis reported segmental scrotal infarction of the left testicle, possibly related to APS.
Discussion
A. Antiphospholipid syndrome (APS) is an acquired autoimmune pro-thrombotic disorder. Clinical presentation consists of recurrent venous and/or arterial thrombosis and pregnancy morbidity due to the presence of antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL), although the pathophysiologic pro-thrombotic mechanism is incompletely understood. [1]
APS can be primary or is called secondary when it is associated with another autoimmune disorder, usually systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE).
The complications we encounter most frequently as radiologists are deep venous thrombosis (often accompanied by pulmonary embolism and chronic thrombo-embolic pulmonary hypertension) and arterial thrombosis of the cerebral circulation leading to transient ischaemic attack/stroke. [2]

B. The most frequent causes of acute scrotal pain in adults are testicular torsion and infection (epididymitis/orchitis), both readily diagnosed with ultrasound. A complete testicular infarction is commonly caused by testicular torsion, severe epididymo-orchitis and trauma.
A segmental scrotal infarct however is a rare cause of acute scrotum, and in the majority of patients no aetiologic cause can be found. [3, 4] A few cases report acute inflammation (epididymo-orchitis), haematologic disorders (such as sickle cell disease and polycythaemia, vasculitis (hypersensitivity angiitis and polyarteritis nodosa), as well as anatomic variations (bell clapper deformity causing intermittent torsion), and intimal fibroplasia of the spermatic artery as potential causes. [5-10]

C. Ultrasonographic (sunglasses) view of both right and left testicle showed subtle
hypoechogenicity and avascular upper pole of left testicle compared to the right.
Follow-up examination one day later showed markedly decreased echotexture and absence of vascularity in the upper pole of the left testicle, confirming our proposed diagnosis of segmental infarction (probably related to the haematologic history).
Occasionally, the differential diagnosis with a hypovascular testicular tumour can be difficult.[11] If testicular tumour markers are suspicious, orchidectomy can be required. Upper pole predilection of segmental infarcts was reported, possibly on the basis of collateral vascular supply of testis, although not confirmed in other studies. [3, 12].

D. The patient was treated with pain medication, new oral anticoagulants were started (NOAC i.e. rivaroxaban) while aspirin was stopped. Clinical follow up at 1, 2, 5 and 8 months was uneventfully, with total pain relief.

E. Teaching point:
Scanning both testis simultaneously can reveal subtle differences in echotexture, a clue to prompt diagnosis. This is erratically called the 'spectacles' view.

Take home messages:
Recommend ultrasound follow-up to confirm slow regression (and exclude tumour) because atypical round segmental infarcts may mimic tumour. [12]
Since segmental testicular infarction can be readily diagnosed with ultrasound, orchidectomy can be avoided in most cases.
Differential Diagnosis List
Segmental scrotal infarction ofthe left testis, probably related to APS/SLE.
Testicular torsion
Epididymitis
Scrotal infarct
Testicular tumour
Epididymo-orchitis
Final Diagnosis
Segmental scrotal infarction ofthe left testis, probably related to APS/SLE.
Case information
URL: https://www.eurorad.org/case/15235
DOI: 10.1594/EURORAD/CASE.15235
ISSN: 1563-4086
License