Tonsil and Adenoid Surgery
What is tonsil and adenoid surgery?
Surgical removal of the tonsils and adenoids (known as a T&A) is
one of the most common operations performed on children in the
U.S. Only 2% or 3% of children have adequate medical reasons for
this procedure. Parents need to be armed with enough facts to
prevent any unnecessary surgery.
The tonsils are not just some worthless pieces of tissue that
block our view of the throat. They have a purpose. They produce
antibodies that fight nose and throat infections. They confine the
infection to the throat, rather than allowing it to spread to the
neck or bloodstream.
What are the risks of surgery?
T&A procedures are not without risk. Under ideal conditions, the
death rate is 1 child per 250,000 operations. Approximately 4% of
children bleed on the fifth to eighth day after surgery. A few of
these children may need a blood transfusion or additional surgery.
All children experience throat discomfort for several days. Some
children whose speech was previously normal develop hypernasal
speech because the soft palate no longer closes completely.
When is surgery not necessary?
Some T&As are performed for unwarranted reasons.
- Large tonsils
Large tonsils do not mean "bad" tonsils or infected tonsils.
The tonsils are normally large during childhood. They can't be
"too large" unless they touch each other. The peak size is
reached between 8 and 12 years of age. Thereafter, they
spontaneously shrink in size each year, as do all of the
body's lymph tissues.
- Recurrent colds and viral sore throats
Several studies have shown that T&As do not decrease the
frequency of viral upper respiratory infections (URIs). These
URIs are unavoidable. Eventually your child develops immunity
to these viruses and experiences fewer colds per year.
- Recurrent strep throats
Recent studies have shown that a child does not have fewer
streptococcal infections of the throat after the tonsils are
removed unless the child experiences 7 or more strep
infections per year (a rare occurrence). For children with 7
or more proven strep throat infections per year, some
healthcare providers recommend daily penicillin for 6 months
instead of a T&A, since penicillin can almost always get rid
of the strep bacteria from the tonsils. Being a carrier of
strep (which causes no symptoms and is harmless and not
contagious) is also not a reason for doing a T&A.
- Recurrent ear infections
This reason for a T&A was formerly controversial, but more
recent studies have shown that removal of the adenoids will
not open the eustachian tube and decrease the frequency of ear
infections or fluid in the middle ear. The exceptions are
children who also have persistent nasal obstruction and
mouth-breathing due to large adenoids. Persistent middle-ear
fluid may require the insertion of ventilation tubes in the
eardrums.
- School absence
If your child misses school for vague reasons (including sore
throats), removing the tonsils will not improve attendance.
- Miscellaneous conditions
A T&A will not help a poor appetite, hay fever, asthma,
febrile convulsions, or bad breath.
When is surgery necessary?
Sometimes the tonsils should come out. But the benefits must
outweigh the risks. Your provider will decide if the tonsils,
adenoids, or both need to be removed. All of the following are
valid reasons for evaluation.
- Persistent mouth-breathing
Mouth-breathing during colds or hay fever is common. Continued
daily mouth-breathing is less common and deserves an
evaluation to see if it is due to large adenoids. The
open-mouth appearance results in teasing, and the
mouth-breathing itself leads to changes in the facial bone
structure (including an overbite that could require
orthodontics).
- Abnormal speech
The speech can be muffled by large tonsils or made hyponasal
(no nasal resonance) by large adenoids. Although other causes
are possible, an evaluation is in order.
- Severe snoring and obstructive sleep apnea
Snoring can have several causes. If snoring occurs every night
and enlarged adenoids are the cause, they should be removed.
In severe cases, the loud snoring is associated with
retractions (pulling in of the spaces between the ribs),
choking, and interruptions of breathing. This is called
obstructive sleep apnea.
- Heart failure
Rarely, large tonsils and adenoids interfere so much with
breathing that blood oxygen is reduced and the right side of
the heart goes into failure. Children with this condition are
short of breath, have limited exercise tolerance, and have a
rapid pulse.
- Persistent swallowing difficulties
During a throat infection, the tonsils may temporarily swell
enough to cause swallowing problems. Some children refuse
meats because they are difficult to swallow. Some children
refuse solid foods. If the problem is persistent and the
tonsils are touching each other, an evaluation is needed. This
problem more often occurs in children with a small mouth.
- Recurrent abscess (deep infection) of the tonsil
Your child's provider can check this.
- Recurrent abscess of a lymph node draining the tonsil
Your child's provider can check this.
- Suspected tumor of the tonsil
These rare tumors cause one tonsil to be much larger than the
other. The tonsil is also quite firm to the touch, and usually
enlarged lymph nodes are found on the same side of the neck.
When should I call my child's healthcare provider?
Call during office hours if:
- You think your child has a valid need for a T&A.
- You have other concerns or questions.
(REMEMBER: Do not give permission for a T&A unless your child has
one of the preceding indications.)
Written by B.D. Schmitt, MD, author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
Published by
RelayHealth.
Last modified: 2005-03-15
Last reviewed: 2008-06-09
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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