You'll find more about the other diagnoses if you check the spelling varicocele and hydrocele .-Nunh-huh 02 : 10, 14 August 2005 ( UTC)
32.
This occurs when adult M . perstans invades the conjunctiva or periorbital connective tissues in the eye . " M . perstans " can also present with hydrocele in South America.
33.
He had been housebound for some years on account of paralysis of the legs, though his chloral addiction is believed to have been a means of alleviating pain from a botched hydrocele removal.
34.
Possible complications of this procedure include hematoma ( bleeding into tissues ), hydrocele ( accumulation of fluid around the affected testicle ), infection, or injury to the scrotal tissue or structures.
35.
Gibbon is believed to have suffered from an extreme case of scrotal swelling, probably a hydrocele testis, a condition which causes the scrotum to swell with fluid in a compartment overlying either testicle.
36.
In long standing cases, hydrocele fluid may be opalescent with cholesterol and may contain crystals of tyrosine and a palpable normal testis confirms the diagnosis; other wise surgical exploration of testis is needed.
37.
This did not help Edward Gibbon, whose gout didn't protect him from a hydrocele, or swollen testicle, the size of a melon, which went septic after surgery and killed him.
38.
In the British comedy series " Peep Show ", there are numerous references to the unusual appearance of Mark Corrigan's testicles; it is eventually revealed that this is due to a " large hydrocele ".
39.
It was followed in 1910 by Gomoiu's introduction to inguinal hernia surgery, his reviews of surgery as applied to genital tuberculosis, vaginal hydrocele, urethrocele, and varicocele, and a work on the physiological role of cholesterol.
40.
Primary hydrocoeles may develop in adulthood, particularly in the elderly and in hot countries, by slow accumulation of serous fluid, presumably caused by impaired reabsorption, which appears to be the explanation for most primary hydroceles, although the reason remains obscure.