Testicular self-examination

Testicular self-examination
Intervention

A man examines his testicles.
MedlinePlus 003909

Testicular self-examination is a medical practice by which external feeling of the testicles can act as a first-warning for testicular cancer.

Testicular cancer is a significant killer of teenage boys and younger men (roughly ages 15–35 or 40), but doctors do not systematically recommend self-examination.[1]

Procedure and Diagnosis

Men from puberty onwards should examine their testes after a hot shower or bath, when the scrotum is looser,[2] and while standing.[3] They should first examine each testicle separately, feeling for lumps, and then compare them to see whether one is larger than the other. By doing this each month, males will become familiar with what is normal for them.

Their testicles should be examined by a doctor if they notice any of the following:

Some symptoms of testicular cancer (which is usually painless, however, in the early stages are common to other disorders of the male urinary tract and reproductive organs, which may also need medical attention from a doctor. These include hydrocele testis, a varicocele, a spermatocele, other genitourinary cancers, urinary tract infections or sexually transmitted infections, or testicular torsion. These are all conditions that should be investigated by a doctor; some of these disorders need quick treatment to preserve reproductive and urinary function and one's health and life.

Evidence and Practice

Practitioners may recommend self-exam if you have risk factors:

Some expert organizations, recommend self-exam if you are a teenager or young adult (to about 35 years old).

It is not clear that self-exam with no presenting symptoms would decrease risk of dying from testicular cancer.[1]

Testicular self-examination has generally low rates of practice in part because males are poorly informed, but also because of psychological aversion.[4] Comparatively woman are more diligent in performing breast self-examination than men. A person's likeliness to perform self-examination is related to their fear of developing cancer.[5] In addition to sex there is some reason to believe that socioeconomic factors also relate to frequency of examination.[6]

Sometimes, if a young adult male has a spouse or partner, they will perform or assist in the exam, which then may be done also as a form of sex play and/or foreplay. Detection, treatment, and cure rates of male genitourinary disorders, like other male health problems, are higher if both the young adult male and his spouse or partner are actively involved in the process (their spouses or partners often are the ones that spot the disorder, and then convince their male spouse or partner to get it treated, when it may not have been discovered and dealt with without them).

See also

References

  1. 1 2 self-exam on MedlinePlus
  2. "Testicular Cancer Self Examination". The Institute of Cancer Research. Retrieved April 17, 2012.
  3. "Testicular self-examination". U.S. Department of Health and Human Services National Institutes of Health. Retrieved April 17, 2012.
  4. Rudberg, Lennart MSc, RN, RNT†; Nilsson, Sten PhD, MD; Wikblad, Karin PhD, BM, RN; Carlsson, Marianne PhD (July–August 2005). "Testicular Cancer and Testicular Self-examination: Knowledge and Attitudes of Adolescent Swedish Men". Cancer Nursing 28 (4): 256–262.
  5. Katz, Roger C.; Meyers, Kelly; and Walls, Jennifer (March 1995). "Cancer awareness and self-examination practices in young men and women". JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE 18 (4): 377–384. doi:10.1007/BF01857661.
  6. Wynd, Christine A. (September 2002). "Testicular Self-Examination in Young Adult Men". Journal of Nursing Scholarship 34 (3): 251–255. doi:10.1111/j.1547-5069.2002.00251.x.

External links

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