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Flashcards in Urology Deck (63)
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1
Q

Buldge either in the suprapubic or scrotal area that increases in size with crying or straining?

A

Inguinal hernia

2
Q

What are findings with an incarcerated inguinal hernia?

A
  1. Irritability
  2. Tender abdomen
  3. Vomiting
  4. Mass is tense
  5. Can’t be reduced
3
Q

What are 2 conditions that might be confused with an incarcerated inguinal hernia?

A
  1. Hydrocele

2. Inguinal lympadenitis

4
Q

How does a hydrocele present?

A

Scrotal enlargement

5
Q

How does inguinal lymphadenitis present?

A

Tender mass, skin overlying is red and warm to touch, history of infection distal to the node

6
Q

2 year old in ED with abdominal pain. On peritoneal dialysis, afebrile, immunizations up to date, diaylsis drainage normal, crusted edges around catheter site, large mass in left lower abdomen lateral to catheter- no rebound or guarding…?

A

Hernia- Children on PD frequently develop abdominal hernias because of increased intraperitoneal pressure

7
Q

Infant with painless swelling of the scrotum, transilluminates on exam

A

Hydrocele

8
Q

What side is a varicocele usually on?

A

Left

9
Q

What is described as a heavy sensation or a “bag of worms”?

A

Varicocele

10
Q

When does the swelling of a varicocele decrease?

A

When the patient is lying down

11
Q

Is the swelling in a varicocele painful or painless?

A

Painless

12
Q

What happens to fertility if you have an undescended tesicle?

A

Goes down

13
Q

Why do we do orchiopexy?

A
  1. Improves fertility

2. Make it palpable to do testicular exams to find cancer earlier

14
Q

True or False: Doing an orchiopexy eliminates risk of malignancy in the testicle?

A

False- doesn’t completely eliminate the risk of malignancy

15
Q

True or False: Only the undescended testicle is at risk for malignancy?

A

False- Descended testicle on other side has a higher malignancy risk too, but not as high as the undescended one

16
Q

What is important to counsel boys on at puberty with a history of undescended testicle?

A

Importance of testicular self-exams

17
Q

True or False: HCG and testosterone can be used to treat undescended testicles?

A

FALSE- Not conisdered effective treatment

18
Q

When should infants with undescended testicles be referred to urology?

A

By 3-6 months if they haven’t descended

19
Q

At what age should an orchiopexy be done by for an undescended testicle?

A

12-18 months

20
Q

Doing a routine physical on a 3 year old that’s new to you. Can’t palpate right testicle, but see in old records bilateral descended testicles have been documented in past… what next?

A

Retractile testicles (overactive cremaster muscle)- Re-examine the patient in the “tailor position” or “frog-leg position” (crossed legs with knees out)

21
Q

True or False: Once testicles descend, they can’t re-ascend?

A

False- There is such a thing as retractile testes that re-ascend and stay there (have to follow-up retractile testicles to ensure they are both descended or refer to Urology)

22
Q

What must be done if you have non-palpable testes in a newborn?

A

Urology evaluation and testicular US prior to discharge

23
Q

What can non-palpable testes in a newborn be a presentation of?

A

Ambiguous genitalia/CAH

24
Q

What is a congenital condition in males in which the opening of the urethra is on the underside of the penis?

A

Hypospadias

25
Q

What type of renal anomalies are associated with a distal hypospadias?

A

None- the incidence of renal anomalies is low

26
Q

What intervention is needed for a distal hypospadias?

A

None

27
Q

Name the 4 syndromes hypospadias can be associated with.

A

SLOB:

  1. Silver Russell Syndrome (Russell Silver Syndrome)
  2. Laurence-Moon-Biedl Syndrome
  3. Opitz Syndrome
  4. Beckwith Wiedemann Syndrome
28
Q

When should surgical correction of hypospadias be done by?

A

First year of life (usually at 6 months)

29
Q

True or False: Patients with hypospadias can get circumcised

A

False- Circumcision shouldn’t be done in a patient with hypospadias

30
Q

What is the triad for Prader-Willi syndrome?

A
  1. Micropenis
  2. Poor feeding
  3. Hypotonia
31
Q

Name 5 things micropenis is associated with

A
  1. Prader-Willi syndrome
  2. Kallmann syndrome
  3. GH deficiency
  4. Septo-optic dysplasia
  5. Hypoglycemia
32
Q

What length of penis in infant can you reassure families is normal?

A

At least 2.5cm you can reassure

33
Q

What should be done if you have a male infant whose penis length is less than 2.5cm (one inch)?

A

Endocrine and/or genetic workup (micropenis)

34
Q

What do you have to be careful of when measuring an infants penis?

A

Fat pad- if they have a big suprapubic fat pad you need to gently stretch the penis to full length and measure from the pubic symphysis

35
Q

What is the typical presentation for epididymitis?

A

Unilateral scrotal pain, dysuria, fever (you will not have testicular mass or urethral discharge)

36
Q

True or False: The cremasteric reflex is absent in epididymitis?

A

False- it is present

37
Q

If a male is sexually active, what is epididymitis usually due to?

A
  1. Chlamydia

2. Neisseria gonorrhea

38
Q

What is the main difference in presentation between epididymitis and orchitis?

A

Orchitis doesn’t have dysuria

39
Q

How does testicular torsion present?

A

Sudden, severe scrotal pain

40
Q

True or False: The cremasteric reflex is absent in testicular torsion?

A

True

41
Q
  1. Cremaster reflex present
  2. Testicle is low lying
  3. White cells noted in urine
  4. Milder more insidious pain often after activity
A

Epididymitis

42
Q
  1. Manipulation makes pain worse
  2. Cremaster reflex absent
  3. Testicle is high or retracted
  4. Abrupt onset of severe pain
A

Testicular torsion

43
Q

What deformity results in a higher risk of testicular torsion?

A

Bell Clapper deformity

44
Q

True or False: Testicular torsion can be bilateral

A

True

45
Q

What needs to be done in cases of suspected testicular torsion?

A

Urgent US with Doppler flow

46
Q

16 year old from Panama, febrile, 2 days of right testicular pain, testicle is swollen, tender, overlying skin erythematous. No urethral discharge or dysuria. No sexual history. US is negative- normal B/L blood flow. Most appropriate next step?

A

Mumps serology- Orchitis (occurs in mumps 30% of the time)

47
Q

What is the inability to retract the foreskin?

A

Phimosis

48
Q

After what age is phimosis abnormal?

A

3

49
Q

What is treatment for phimosis?

A

Topical steroid cream along with periodic gentle retraction- If this doesn’t work, circumcision might be needed

50
Q

What is paraphimosis?

A

Foreskin that once retracted can’t be brought back to its normal position- results in constriction and severe pain

51
Q

Which is a surgical emergency- Phimosis or paraphimosis?

A

Paraphimosis

52
Q

What 2 things is urethritis usually due to?

A
  1. Gonorrhea

2. Chlamydia

53
Q

15 year old male, unprotected sex, dysuria, swelling of foreskin, UA with 3+ WBCs, gram stain negative, conjunctivitis… other physical findings?

A

Arthritis- Reactive arthritis can be an autoimmune response to chlamydia infections

54
Q

What is the memory aid for reactive arthritis (used to be called Reiter syndrome)?

A
  1. Hurts when you see (conjunctivitis)
  2. Hurts when you pee (urethritis)
  3. Hurts in your knee (arthritis)

*Can’t see, Can’t pee, Can’t climb a tree

55
Q

What is a common cause of non-sexually transmitted urethritis?

A

Urethral instrumentation following a surgical procedure

56
Q

What should be done if you suspect a bladder infection?

A

UA and culture

57
Q

4 year old male, tiny white bumps on tip of penis, what’s the cause?

A

Inclusion cysts

58
Q

What should you think if you get a male whose parents noticed “pus” around the head of the penis?

A

Smegma under the prepuce- This is normal in an uncircumcised child up until age 3, no treatment

59
Q

What is any firm painless solid scrotal mass until proven otherwise?

A

Testicular cancer

60
Q

How should testicular masses be evaluated?

A

Bilateral US (even is the mass is unilateral)

61
Q

What are 3 important labs to get when you suspect testicular cancer?

A

Lactate dehydrogenase, B-HCG, and alpha-fetoprotein

62
Q

What race is more likely to get testicular cancer?

A

Caucasians

63
Q

Name 5 things that are high risk factors for testicular cacncer

A
  1. Cryptorchidism
  2. Gonadal dysgenesis
  3. Previous testicular cancer
  4. Family history
  5. Klinefelter syndrome