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Home » Oncology » Oncology – Testis » Inguinal orchidectomy

Inguinal orchidectomy

Pre-operatively:

  • Tumour markers mandatory prior to orchidectomy
  • Assess fertility and offer sperm banking
  • Identify factors which may make procedure difficult – previous inguinal hernia repair, cryptorchidism surgery, concurrent hernia, obesity
  • Offer testicular prosthesis with placement at time of orchidectomy

 

Procedure:

  • Transverse incision
    • Deep ring landmark – 2 – 4 cm above midpoint of inguinal ligament
    • External ring – 1.5 cm superior / lateral to pubic tubercle (or invaginate scrotum)
  • Dissection through superficial fat – 2 x superficial veins usually identified and controlled
  • Exposure of EOA down to superficial ring
  • Incise EOA sharply in line of fibres. Identify and protect ilioinguinal nerve deep to EOA.
  • Mobilise cord circumferentially off EOA, cremasteric fibres and external spermatic fascia down to level of pubic tubercle. Early clamping of proximal cord to avoid theoretical seeding of tumour cells.
  • Deliver testis and divide gubernacular fibres, careful not to button-hole scrotal skin.
  • Division of cord in one or two parts, with ligation of proximal cord – transfixion suture 0-vicryl (ease n squeeze) followed by 2-0 prolene tag.
  • Haemostasis of cremasteric and gubernacular fibres. Place prosthesis if doing so. Closure of EOA with 3-0 vicryl avoiding II nerve.

 

Complications

  • Infection – rare.
  • Ilioinguinal nerve injury or entrapment – may present with pain (immediate or delayed), or hypoesthesia or hyperesthesia (anterior scrotum / upper thigh)
  • Post-operative retroperitoneal bleed
    • Consider observation if haemodynamically stable / Hb stable, or embolisation
    • Re-open inguinal incision with proximal extension, may need to extend into retroperitoneum to find bleeding stump
  • Scrotal violation – need to surveil inguinal nodes also