Acute Scrotum

Uche Ezomike, MD, Opeoluwa A Adesanya, MBBS, FMCS, Emmanuel A. Ameh, MBBS, FWACS, FACS, Esther Saguil, MD

Introduction

Introduction

Introduction

An acute scrotum is defined as severe scrotal pain with or without scrotal swelling and erythema. The inciting lesion may involve the testis, testicular or epididymal appendages, epididymis, scrotal skin, hernia or referred pain from outside the scrotum (e.g ureteric colic). The most likely cause is age dependent.

Optimal management of the acute scrotum is important to the pediatric surgeon as urgent clinical evaluation to exclude testicular torsion or incarcerated hernia has important implications. Undue delay may lead to testicular or intestinal gangrene.

see also Testicular Torsion and Inguinal Hernia.

There's more to see -- the rest of this topic is available only to subscribers.

© 2026 American Pediatric Surgical Association and Unbound Medicine, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
All content is protected by copyright and may not be used for AI model training or other unauthorized purposes.