Article : The Boy Was Feverish, With a Swollen Testicle. What Could He Possibly Have?

Arnie Pye

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
I thought this article would be of interest since the problem being discussed caused long-lasting post-viral fatigue. I was surprised by the diagnosis - it was something that I've never come across personally, although I have heard of it.

Link : https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/04/...len-testicle-what-could-he-possibly-have.html

[...]

It was on his second day of camp that he started to feel sick. His head throbbed, and his eyes ached. He thought he was going to throw up. At the infirmary, he was told he probably had a virus.

He spent most of the next two days in bed, alternating between shaking chills and drenching sweats. Though still tired, he forced himself out of bed to take part in his long-anticipated camp. He focused on playing his instruments — guitar, piano, saxophone — and by week’s end, he felt almost normal. But the day after he got to Boston, he developed a rash on his arms — a sleeve of strange-looking raised red spots. He sent his parents a picture. When it spread to his leg, they suggested he go to the infirmary.

The doctor there said that it looked like the kind of rash you could get with a virus. Maybe it was linked to the illness he had the week before, or maybe he had picked up something else. The doctor gave him antibiotics — just in case — as well as prednisone, a steroid.

Camp was everything the boy had hoped for — great teachers and great musicians. But after a couple of days, he started to feel sick again. He ached all over; his chest felt strangely tight, as if he were wearing a T-shirt a couple of sizes too small. One afternoon in class, he could barely get up from his chair and had to spend the rest of the day in bed. The next day, the last day of camp, he became painfully aware of a new problem: His right testicle was swollen and incredibly tender. But he had to meet his father at the airport to fly to London to join his mother and brother on vacation. Sitting in the car and then the plane was torture. His groin ached and throbbed no matter how he positioned himself.
The next morning, he couldn’t make himself get out of bed. His parents and brother set out for a day of exploring the city. By the end of the third day, he thought he could manage getting up. They had reservations at the fancy restaurant in the hotel that night. He put on dress clothes he brought for this occasion, but after ordering, the boy realized he couldn’t stay to eat. The very thought of food made his stomach heave. Everything hurt. His right testicle felt as if it were the size of a baseball. He went back to bed, and after dinner his mother took him to an emergency room.

[...]

Article continues :
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/04/...len-testicle-what-could-he-possibly-have.html
 
OK, I take your point about getting him home. I probably would have done that. But it's not clear from the article how much he was telling his parents about his symptoms except when they completely stopped him in his tracks. And it fluctuated, so they probably thought it was getting better whenever the symptoms abated. If all the doctors were assuring them it was just a virus, they had no reason to do more than let him rest in bed.
 
I should say that we all know it can be confusing as to what to do when faced with a mysterious illness and doctors giving unconvincing runaround. And it's always easier to be self-righteous Monday Morning Quarterback.

I'm going to stick to the guns here, though. It sounds like they knew enough. You can't hedge prestigious music camp/international vacation with your child's health. This should be common sense.
 
I agree with all that, @James Morris-Lent. But when all a 16 year old tells his parents is he has a rash, and the infirmary doctor has told him it's a virus and given him treatment, and he's desperate to stay at the camp he'd looked forward to for so long, I'm guessing he made light of the symptoms so he could stay.

It was at the stage of then setting off for Europe despite the lad being in a lot of pain and clearly unwell, I would agree - forgo Europe and take him home.

But again - maybe he hid his symptoms until they were already in Europe, so going home seemed pointless when he could rest and see doctors if needed just as well in Europe as he could at home. You're not going to drag a sick kid out of bed to fly him half way across the world, when the doctor assures you it's just a virus that will go away with a few days rest. And no airline is going to allow a kid too sick to get out of bed with something possibly contagious to get on the plane anyway.

I promise to say no more on the subject!
 
I agree with all that, @James Morris-Lent. But when all a 16 year old tells his parents is he has a rash, and the infirmary doctor has told him it's a virus and given him treatment, and he's desperate to stay at the camp he'd looked forward to for so long, I'm guessing he made light of the symptoms so he could stay.

It was at the stage of then setting off for Europe despite the lad being in a lot of pain and clearly unwell, I would agree - forgo Europe and take him home.

But again - maybe he hid his symptoms until they were already in Europe, so going home seemed pointless when he could rest and see doctors if needed just as well in Europe as he could at home. You're not going to drag a sick kid out of bed to fly him half way across the world, when the doctor assures you it's just a virus that will go away with a few days rest. And no airline is going to allow a kid too sick to get out of bed with something possibly contagious to get on the plane anyway.

I promise to say no more on the subject!
Certainly we have less-than-perfect information. If only life came with the Video Assistant Referees they've been rolling out in soccer all over the world. Then we could all disagree with the proper facts at hand!
 
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