View clinical trials related to Spermatic Cord Torsion.
Filter by:NIRS estimates tissue saturation of oxygenation in tissue beds. Animals studies suggested that transscrotal NIRS measurements can quantify testicular hypoxia and differentiate between torsed and non torsed testicles. The results of human studies are not conclusive. The hypothesis is that the difference in NIRS values between torsed and healthy testicles would not be zero and that this difference would be zero in control group and that NIRS could help to detect rapidly a TT Testicular torsion (TT) is a functional emergency. The diagnosis is sometimes difficult to make. No paraclinical examination can eliminate it with certainty. The investigators aimed to evaluate the interest of transscrotal near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) for the diagnosis of TT of child
Background: Testicular torsion is a scrotal emergency that results in impaired blood supply to the testis and ischemia of the testis as a result of the rotation of the spermatic cord around itself. The etiology of testicular torsion is not clear, but various predisposing factors are responsible for the occurrence of testicular torsion. Recently, with the discovery of "Toll-Like Receptors" (TLRs), new horizons have been opened in the field of innate immune system-related diseases. Objective: To mediate the relationship between testicular torsion and TLR4 receptors. Material-Method: Testicular specimens of patients who developed testicular ischemia after testicular torsion and underwent orchiectomy between 2012-2022 were reached. A study of TLR 4 receptors was performed in these testicular specimens. The patients were divided into two groups according to their ages newborns and adolescents.
Testicular torsion is the spontaneous twisting of the testis and its blood vessels, resulting in acute pain, vascular compromise and death of the testicle if unrelieved quickly. In this study, investigators will test a near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) device that rapidly and non-invasively measures deep tissue oxygen saturation.