Men's Health Emergencies

A Paramedic Study Guide

Epidemiology & Strategy

National Men's Health Strategy 2020-2030

Men die more often from preventable diseases than women. The National Strategy identifies 5 priority health issues where men are over-represented:

  • Mental Health (including suicide)
  • Chronic Conditions
  • Sexual & Reproductive Health
  • Injuries and Risk Taking
  • Healthy Ageing

Disorders of the Penis

Anatomy Note: The Foreskin

A non-retractable foreskin is a normal variant in children. Retractability increases with age: 10% at 1 year, 50% at 10 years, 99% at 17 years. Never forcibly retract the foreskin for cleaning.

Phimosis vs. Paraphimosis

Condition Description Paramedic Implication
Phimosis Pathological tightening of the foreskin preventing retraction over the glans. Can cause urine trapping and balanitis. Not usually an emergency unless causing urinary retention.
Paraphimosis Foreskin is retracted behind the glans and cannot return. Acts as a tourniquet. Urologic Emergency. Causes swelling, pain, and potential necrosis of the glans. Requires analgesia and transport.

Priapism

Definition: Involuntary, prolonged erection (>4 hours). Urologic emergency due to potential ischemia.

  • Ischaemic (Low-flow): Painful. Caused by Sickle Cell Disease, leukemia, or drugs (ED meds, cocaine). Blood is trapped.
  • Non-Ischaemic (High-flow): Not usually painful. Caused by trauma (fistula formation).
Management: Analgesia, urination attempt, transport. Cold packs may be used (contraindicated in Sickle Cell).

Balanitis

Definition: Inflammation of the glans penis. Often presents with pain, redness, swelling, and discharge.

Causes: Poor hygiene, chemical irritation, or fungal infection (Candida). Red Flag: Recurrent balanitis in adults may indicate poorly controlled Diabetes Mellitus.

Zipper Injuries

Common in children. The foreskin or scrotum becomes entrapped.

DO NOT attempt to unzip or remove the zipper in the pre-hospital setting. This causes excruciating pain and tissue damage.

Action: Provide analgesia, limit movement, transport for removal (often requires cutting the zip mechanism).

Disorders of the Scrotum & Testes

History Taking Sensitivity

Assessment of the male genitalia can be embarrassing for the patient. Paramedics do not typically perform physical scrotal exams in the field unless trauma/hemorrhage is present. Diagnosis relies heavily on history.

Key Questions: Onset (sudden vs gradual)? Trauma? Sexual history (STI risk)? Urinary symptoms? Nausea/Vomiting?

Testicular Torsion vs. Epididymitis

Feature Testicular Torsion (Emergency) Epididymitis
Pathophysiology Twisting of the spermatic cord cutting off blood supply. Inflammation of the epididymis (usually bacterial/STI).
Onset Sudden, severe pain. Gradual onset (24-48 hrs).
Age Group Common in adolescents/young adults. Sexually active men or older men (UTI).
Associated Sx Nausea and Vomiting are common. Fever, dysuria, urethral discharge.
Reflexes Absent cremasteric reflex. Cremasteric reflex usually present.

The TWIST Score (Clinical Prediction for Torsion)

Clinical Feature Points
Testicular Swelling2
Hard Testis2
Absent Cremasteric Reflex1
Nausea / Vomiting1
High Riding Testis1
Low Risk (0-2)No Ultrasound
Intermediate (3-4)Ultrasound Warranted
High Risk (>5)Urgent Surgery

Testicular Cancer

Most common cancer in men aged 15-35. Risk factors include cryptorchidism (undescended testes). Often presents as a painless lump or slight enlargement/heaviness in the scrotum. Early detection leads to 95%+ cure rate.

Disorders of the Prostate

Anatomy

The prostate sits at the neck of the bladder. Enlargement compresses the urethra, leading to Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms (LUTS).

Condition Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH) Prostate Cancer
Description Non-cancerous enlargement. Extremely common (>50% of men over 60). 1 in 6 males diagnosed by age 85.
Symptoms Hesitancy, frequency, urgency, weak stream, nocturia, sensation of incomplete emptying. Can lead to Acute Urinary Retention. Early stages: Often asymptomatic.
Late stages: Similar urinary symptoms to BPH, blood in urine/semen, bone pain (metastasis).
Management Catheterization for retention. Surgery (TURP). Monitoring, surgery, radiation.

Endocrine Issues & Androgen Abuse

Androgen Abuse (Performance Enhancing Drugs)

Approximately 2% of Australian secondary students report using image-enhancing drugs. Paramedics must recognize the systemic signs of abuse.

Physical Signs:

  • Rapid/Significant weight gain (Muscle)
  • Severe acne (Face/Back)
  • Gynaecomastia (Breast tissue growth)
  • Testicular atrophy
  • Injection site infections/abscesses
  • Hypertension & Abnormal ECG

Psychological Signs: Aggression ("Roid Rage"), impulsivity, anxiety, depression.

Legitimate Androgen Use

Hypogonadism (testicular failure) or pituitary disease causes androgen deficiency. These patients require testosterone replacement therapy. Be careful not to assume all muscular patients on testosterone are abusing it.