| Literature DB >> 35003990 |
Jouhar J Kolleri1, Abdirahman M Abdirahman1, Nabil Sherif Mahmood1, Sushila Ladumor1, Safa Hameed2.
Abstract
Cases of acute scrotum presenting to the emergency department are usually due to testicular torsion, complicated hernia, or epididymo-orchitis. Thrombosis of the spermatic vein is an uncommon entity and most of the cases reported to date are of unilateral involvement. Here, we present an extremely rare case of spontaneous bilateral spermatic vein thrombosis, which was diagnosed by a Doppler ultrasound of the testes. This article highlights its clinical presentation, radiological imaging, etiology, and management.Entities:
Keywords: acute scrotum; bilateral spermatic vein thrombosis; spermatic vein thrombosis; testicular vein thrombosis; ultrasound doppler
Year: 2021 PMID: 35003990 PMCID: PMC8723787 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.20161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1Doppler ultrasound of the testes showing (A) bilateral testes with normal echogenicity and (B) normal vascularization.
Figure 2Doppler ultrasound of the testes showing non-compressible (A and B) right and (C and D) left spermatic veins with echogenic thrombus and no flow on Doppler.