Testis mal-descent
Appearance
Occurs when the testis is arrested in some part of its normal path to the scrotum
- Differentiate from ectopic testis - abnormally placed outside this path
Incidence
[edit | edit source]- About 4% of boys have one or both incompletely descended at birth
- 2/3 of these reach the scrotum during first three months
- Full descent after first three months is uncommon
- Overall incidence of testicular mal-descent at 1 year is 1%
Pathology
[edit | edit source]- More common on the right
- Bilateral in 20% of cases
- May be:
- Intra-abdominal (usually lying extraperitoneal, just inside the internal ring)
- Intra-canalicular - may or may not be palpable
- Extra-canalicular - scrotal neck
- Ectopic - commonly superficial inguinal pouch (just inferior and medial to the superficial ring), femoral triangle, root of penis, or perineum
- Testis is usually macroscopically normal in early childhood but typically smaller by puberty than normal boys
- Microscopic changes apparent from 1-2 years of age (higher testis has higher degree of change)
Consequences
[edit | edit source]- Impaired fertility - paternity rates around 2/3 normal if unilateral and 1/3 normal if bilateral
- Malignancy - 5-10x greater cancer risk than normal, most commonly seminoma. Unclear whether early orchidopexy removes this risk.
- Hernia - patent processus vaginalis in 90%
- Testicular torsion - higher risk
Examination
[edit | edit source]- Key question is whether this is retractile or undescended - retractile testis can be gently milked down and require no treatment
- Need a relaxed boy in a warm room and supine position
- Check for scrotum development - in undescended testes, it should be underdeveloped, while in retractile testes, it is generally normal
Treatment
[edit | edit source]- Orchidopexy should be performed before the age of 12 months
- Performed through a short incision over the deep ring
- Mobilise the testis down to scrotum and secure in a pocket between dartos muscle and skin
- Ligate and divide processus vaginalis , coverings of spermatic cord and fibrous bands at level of internal ring
- Sometimes a two-stage procedure is necessary
- Consider orchidectomy if the testis is later found to be atrophic