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Symptoms of Testicular Cancer |
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Testicular cancer occurs most commonly in young men. Testicular cancer is the most common malignancy in men 25-35 years old men. Patients often develop testicular cancer symptoms of a painless enlargement of the testicle. Many men will have a mass with associated pain. Some testicular cancer symptoms include the presence of a hydrocele, back pain, inguinal swelling, nausea, weight loss and constipation.
If metastatic, testicular cancer symptoms can include shortness of breath, cough, chest pain, abdominal pain, back pain, and headache.
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| To view information about symptoms of Testicular Cancer go to our Testicular Cancer questions and answers page. | |
| To view specific information about topics related to Testicular Cancer symptoms go to our Topics page. | |
| To view laboratory abnormalities go to our Labs page. | |
| To view the side effects of medication associated with the treatment of Testicular Cancer go to our Pharmacology page. | |
| To search Flash-Med's questions and answers for your key words go to our Q&A Search page. | |
| To view the and differential diagnosis of Testicular Cancer symptoms go to our Medicine Methods page. | |
Symptoms of Testicular Cancer often do not lead directly to the underlying diagnosis and many symptoms can be misleading. Please review all concerns and information found on this website with your health care provider. | |