Newcomer children show lower rates of emergency department use for non‑urgent conditions, study finds
Refugee and immigrant children are less likely to visit the emergency department for minor illnesses compared to children born in Ontario.
A new population-based, cohort study from London Health Sciences Centre Research Institute (LHSCRI), Western University, and ICES, found that living male kidney donors have a higher chance of developing a scrotal condition called a scrotal hydrocele, which is when an area around the testicle swells with fluid, causing discomfort which may require surgery to ease. The scrotal hydroceles were found to occur on the same side as the donated kidney.
Now published in Annals of Internal Medicine, the research team analyzed health data from nearly 900 male donors in Ontario and 9,000 male non-donors with similar baseline characteristics. They found that one in eight male donors went on to have scrotal surgery over 20 years, compared to only one in 143 non-donors.
Patients receiving kidneys are often in need of the organ because dialysis treatments, which remove toxins from the blood, are not as effective as a healthy kidney. Even with regular dialysis, the average life expectancy is about five years. In contrast, a kidney transplant can dramatically improve both quality of life and survival, helping patients live longer and more independently.
In his clinical practice, Dr. Garg noticed several former male donors reporting scrotal swelling and pain on the same side as their donated kidney, years after the donation procedure, which prompted further investigation.
“One donor started wearing a support at night and could no longer run marathons because of his discomfort while another shared that they could no longer ride a bicycle,” says Dr. Garg, Scientist at LHSCRI, Nephrologist at London Health Sciences Centre (LHSC), Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology and Biostatistics at Western, and Lead of the ICES provincial Program in Kidney, Dialysis and Transplantation.
The usual treatment for a painful hydrocele is a hydrocelectomy, a brief day surgery; recovery is typically a few weeks before returning to normal activities.
The study used records made available through ICES, an independent research institute that manages Ontario’s comprehensive health-care databases. Several team members participate in a provincial program which uses ICES data to enhance kidney, dialysis, and transplantation care.
“Thanks to a team experienced in the use of population-based health records, we pursued a clinical observation quickly and rigorously,” says Garg.
While the study brings attention to this connection, LHSC experts emphasize that living kidney donation remains a life-saving act that transforms lives. The team stresses that this new insight should inform better screening, counselling, and follow-up care, not discourage donation.
This story was originally published by the London Health Sciences Centre Research Institute.

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