Testicular Self-Examination |
Testicular Self-Examination
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The Testicular Cancer Research Center (TCRC) recommends
following these steps every month.
■ The self-exam for testicular cancer is best performed
after a warm bath or shower (heat relaxes the scrotum and makes it easier to
spot anything
abnormal).
■ Stand in front of a mirror and check for any swelling on
the scrotal skin.
■ Examine each testicle with both hands. Place the index
and middle fingers under the testicle with the thumbs placed on top.
■ Roll the testicle gently between the thumbs and fingers.
You shouldn’t feel any pain when doing the exam.
■ It is normal for one testicle to be slightly larger than
the other.
■ Find the epididymis, the soft, tube-like structure
behind the testicle that collects and carries sperm. If you are familiar with
this structure, you won’t mistake it for a suspicious lump.
■ Cancerous lumps usually are found on the sides of the
testicle but can also show up on the front.
■ Lumps on the epididymis are not cancerous.
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