(CNN) --
Imagine carrying a bowling ball between your legs that weighs close to 200 pounds.
If that image is too much to stomach, continue reading with caution.
Wesley
Warren, 49, spent more than four years with this extra burden before having
surgery to repair the damage from a rare medical condition called scrotal
lymphedema.
When
doctors placed the swollen mass they had cut from Warren 's scrotum on the scale, it weighed 132
pounds. That's not counting the fluid or smaller pieces of tissue the surgeons
had also removed from the Las Vegas
man.
"There
are a lot of people that will look and laugh and stare in shock and awe and
amazement," Warren
says as he walks down the street in a preview for TLC's upcoming show "The
Man with the 132-Pound
Scrotum."
The one-hour special airs Monday at 9 p.m. ET/PT.
"It's
tough to deal with it, you know, because essentially, this is a sort of living
and breathing freak show."
It began in
2008, Warren
told TLC, when he awoke to a shooting pain in his testicles. The tissue around
his penis soon began to swell, eventually growing at an estimated rate of 3
pounds per month.
One doctor
told Warren
that it might be necessary to castrate him to fix the problem; others told him
that he would probably die on the operating table. And the cost of the surgery
alone would be in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. After Warren appeared on the Howard Stern radio
show, appealing for help, a fellow scrotal lymphedema sufferer referred him to
Dr. Joel Gelman, who offered to do the surgery for free.
Gelman,
director of the Center for Reconstructive Urology at the University
of California , Irvine , specializes in urethral and penile
reconstruction surgery.
Although
the headline of TLC's special is catchy, scrotal lymphedema is a very real
condition, Gelman said. He hopes media attention surrounding the show will
encourage other men with the problem to seek treatment.
Here are
some more answers about this condition:
What is
scrotal lymphedema?
Scrotal
lymphedema, also known as scrotal elephantiasis, is a "massive
enlargement" of the scrotum due to thickening of tissue and accumulation
of fluid, Gelman said.
What causes
it?
Outside North America , scrotal lymphedema is often caused by a
parasitic infection called lymphatic filariasis that's spread by mosquitoes.
"Thread-like worms" lodge themselves in the lymphatic system,
according to the World Health Organization, where they can interfere with a
person's immune system.
But
lymphatic filariasis is virtually unheard-of in the United States , Gelman said. Most
cases of scrotal lymphedema here are caused by blockages in the lymphatic
vessels that prevent fluid from draining from the area. Doctors are unsure what
causes this blockage; in Warren 's
case, Gelman believes it was an injury or trauma to his scrotum.
What are
the symptoms?
The most
obvious symptom is a large scrotum; this can range in size from a grapefruit to
a basketball. But the mass doesn't "max out" at any particular size,
Gelman said. It will keep growing until the patient seeks treatment.
"(Warren ) didn't report
that he was always in pain, but I think the biggest problem is that the sheer
size of the mass made it very uncomfortable for him," the surgeon said.
"It's like lifting weights to take a step."
How common
is scrotal lymphedema?
It's rare,
especially in the United
States . Definite numbers are difficult to
come by, and the condition may be underdiagnosed due to physicians' lack of
awareness, Gelman said. Many patients with the condition are also obese and are
simply instructed by their doctors to lose weight.
How do you
treat it?
Surgery is
usually the best option to remove the swollen tissue, Gelman said. A surgeon
who specializes in this type of procedure will cut a T-shape in the mass,
identify the penis and testicles to make sure they aren't harmed and then
excise the excess tissue. The surgeon will then use undamaged tissue to cover
the penis and scrotum.
How is Warren doing now?
Um, what if
I think I have it?
If you are
experiencing the symptoms noted above, see a doctor as soon as possible. Ask
for a referral to a specialist if your primary care physician is unfamiliar
with these types of conditions.
An
unusually large scrotum can have a variety of causes, Gelman said. One of the
most common is a hernia, in which a small part of the intestines enters the
scrotum. Another cause is fluid buildup on one side of a man's body between the
testicle and the skin; this is called hydrocele. All are treatable and usually
not life-threatening unless left too long.
Source: CNN
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