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Starks has twisted testicle removed
Associated Press
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| Starks |
SALT LAKE CITY Utah Jazz guard John Starks missed
Friday's practice and won't make the trip to Dallas for Game 3 of
their playoff series with the Mavericks.
Starks, 35, is recovering from surgery to remove a twisted
testicle. Until Friday morning he had been listed as questionable
for Saturday's game.
It was the second straight day that the Jazz had said Starks was
expected to attend practice. In both cases, the team said Starks
needed more time to recover from Tuesday's procedure.
Jazz spokesman David Allred said Starks will be evaluated again
Saturday night in Utah. He added that Starks could be available and
possibly make the trip to Dallas for Game 4 on Tuesday if the
Mavericks extend the series with a win.
Karl Malone missed Friday's practice because one of his children
was having dental surgery. John Crotty also missed practice with a stomach virus, but he
and Malone were expected to travel to Dallas.
Starks had surgery Tuesday and was hospitalized overnight
for a condition called testicular torsion, said the source, who
spoke on condition of anonymity. Allred refused to confirm the report,
saying only that Starks' aliment wasn't basketball-related. The
team issued a news release Tuesday saying Starks "successfully
underwent a minor medical procedure."
Dr. Tony Middleton Jr., chief of urology at LDS Hospital in Salt
Lake City, said torsion occurs when a testicle becomes twisted 360
degrees and its blood supply is cut off.
Patients complain of swelling and extreme pain in the testicle.
Prompt treatment, usually within four hours, is required. Sometimes
doctors can untwist the testicle by hand, but surgery often is
necessary.
"We'll open up and untwist the testicle, then give it a few
minutes to see if that restores the blood supply. It will pink
up," Middleton said. "More often than not, the testicle remains
dark and that indicates the tissue has died."
In that case, the testicle must be removed because gangrene can
set in.
Starks was released from an undisclosed Salt Lake-area hospital
Wednesday and was resting at home.
"He's really feeling good," the source said Thursday. "There was a
little concern today, not that there could be complications, but
the feeling was that keeping him off his feet would be better for
him."
Allred said the procedure was unrelated to a previous overnight
hospitalization for Starks, who checked into Lakeview Hospital in
Bountiful on Sunday. The Jazz have said he complained of
"abdominal pain" after eating ice cream, but tests showed nothing
unusual.
Dr. Blake Hamilton, assistant professor of urology at the
University of Utah's School of Medicine, said it's not unusual for
torsion patients to return to work within a few days of the
procedure.
"It varies quite a lot," Hamilton said. "Some people have a
high pain threshold. Some people have jobs that require them back,
and some people work in factories where they might not want to
return right away."
The cause of torsion is unknown. It occurs more frequently in
adolescent boys than in grown men.
"It has to do with anatomy, how the testicle is formed. Some
people are more predisposed to it," Hamilton said.
Middleton said torsion "is an anatomic impossibility" in 95
percent of males.
"Because of the way the testicle is hooked to the side
structure, the testicle simply can't twist," he said. "However, 3
to 5 percent of men have anatomic circumstances that allow it to
twist."
For most patients, there are no long-term effects from surgery
to treat testicular torsion. It doesn't cause sterility or
impotence and most men can resume a normal lifestyle.
"There's no particular restriction," Middleton said. "A
person who has the procedure should be able to live a normal
life."
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