A small ball of flesh growing hard on the scrotum

A small hard meatball on the scrotum usually requires consideration of the location, size, nature and activity of the growth. If the meatball at the scrotum is small and is not accompanied by other symptoms and does not affect life, special treatment is usually not necessary. However, if the symptoms are heavy or accompanied by other symptoms, patients are recommended to undergo systematic treatment: 1. soft fibroids: soft fibroids are benign tumors that grow at the fibrous tissue and may occur at the groin, mostly caused by obesity, infection, diabetes and other reasons, mostly not accompanied by painful symptoms, patients with soft fibroids at the scrotum are recommended to consider using laser treatment to eliminate soft fibroids, which generally Patients with sebaceous cysts in the scrotum are recommended to have the cysts removed surgically, and the prognosis is good, but some patients may have infections, so patients are recommended to cooperate with anti-infection treatment to relieve symptoms. Epididymal cyst: it may be a cyst at the epididymis caused by semen stagnation, manifested as a hard ball of flesh growing in the scrotum, mostly not accompanied by other symptoms, some patients may have a feeling of swelling if the cyst is too large, if the cyst is small and does not affect the body too much, it can usually be eliminated on its own, if the cyst is too large, it needs to be removed by surgical treatment. In addition, diseases such as testicular nodules, scabies nodules, acromegaly, testicular tumors, and epididymal nodules may also cause a patient to develop a hard little meatball on the scrotum. If the patient has other symptoms such as pain, redness, swelling, itching, or breakage in addition to a meatball on the scrotum, it is recommended that the patient go to a regular hospital to improve the relevant examination, confirm the nature of the lump, and treat the primary condition early so as to improve the relevant symptoms.