Testicular torsion
Background
- Twisting of the spermatic cord causing ischemia of the testicle
- A true urologic emergency — testicular salvage rate >90% if detorsion within 6 hours[1]
- After 12 hours: salvage rate drops to ~50%; after 24 hours: <10%
- Bimodal incidence: neonates and adolescents (peak 12-18 years)
- Most common cause of acute testicular pain requiring surgery in males <25
Types
- Intravaginal (most common) — within tunica vaginalis; associated with "bell clapper" deformity
- Extravaginal — entire testis and tunica rotate; typically neonatal
Clinical Features
- Sudden onset, severe unilateral testicular pain
- Nausea, vomiting (very common)
- High-riding testicle with horizontal lie
- Absent cremasteric reflex on affected side (most sensitive PE finding; >99% sensitivity in some studies, but absence does not rule out torsion)
- Diffuse testicular swelling and tenderness
- Negative Prehn sign (elevation of testis does not relieve pain) — unreliable
- May have history of prior intermittent episodes (intermittent torsion-detorsion)
- No dysuria, discharge, or fever (suggests alternative diagnosis)
Differential Diagnosis
- Epididymitis / Epididymo-orchitis
- Torsion of appendix testis (blue dot sign)
- Inguinal hernia (incarcerated)
- Testicular tumor
- Testicular rupture / trauma
- Hydrocele
- Varicocele
- Henoch-Schönlein purpura (in children)
- Fournier gangrene
Evaluation
- Clinical diagnosis — high suspicion = immediate urology consult; do NOT delay for imaging
- Doppler ultrasound — if diagnosis uncertain[2]
- Decreased or absent blood flow to affected testis
- Sensitivity ~88-100%, specificity ~90-100%
- Normal flow does NOT completely exclude torsion (intermittent or early)
- If high clinical suspicion, proceed to OR despite normal ultrasound
- Urinalysis — typically normal in torsion (pyuria suggests epididymitis)
- TWIST score (Testicular Workup for Ischemia and Suspected Torsion) can risk-stratify in pediatrics
Management
Manual Detorsion
- Attempt if surgical intervention will be delayed
- Open the book technique: rotate the affected testicle medial-to-lateral (as opening a book)
- Typically requires 1-3 full rotations (360-1080 degrees)
- Successful detorsion: immediate pain relief and return of normal testicular position
- If pain worsens, try rotating in opposite direction
- Successful manual detorsion still requires surgical orchidopexy
Surgical Management
- Emergent urology consultation for surgical exploration and orchidopexy
- Bilateral orchidopexy performed (bell clapper deformity is bilateral in ~80%)
- If testis is nonviable: orchiectomy
Supportive Care
- IV analgesics (do NOT withhold — pain does not aid diagnosis once torsion suspected)
- Antiemetics
- NPO in anticipation of surgery
Disposition
- All suspected testicular torsion requires emergent urology consultation and OR
- Do not discharge without urology evaluation
