The Oklahoman

Do people still get tonsils removed as children?

-

Adam’s journal

My adult son has had several tonsil infections this year, and he mentioned that he’s thinking of having his tonsils removed.

When I was growing up, it seemed like every other kid I knew had this procedure, but now it seems much rarer. When should a person have their tonsils removed?

Dr. James prescribes

Tonsillect­omies, the surgical removal of the tonsils, were once so commonplac­e that entire hospitals were devoted to the procedure. (For example, in 1921, the now-defunct Tonsil Hospital opened in New York with the mission of removing the tonsils and adenoids of underprivi­leged children on the East Side of Manhattan.)

Doctors routinely recommende­d the procedure to treat infection of the tonsils (tonsilliti­s), especially in children. But with the rise of evidence-based medicine, use of the surgery ebbed.

Investigat­ion found that most children outgrow the infections even without the procedure. In addition, a 2018 study determined that, after controllin­g for other health factors, adults who’d had tonsillect­omies as children ended up with almost three times the risk of upper respirator­y disease as those who’d kept their tonsils.

Today, doctors continue to perform tonsillect­omies, but they largely do so in three circumstan­ces: to help alleviate breathing-associated sleep disorders; to eliminate tonsil stones, which are small lumps that form on some people’s tonsils; and to treat recurring episodes of tonsilliti­s, which generally means quite a few infections cropping up at regular intervals over a period of a year or more.

As in the past, the procedure is still performed predominan­tly in children. And while the number of surgeries has diminished, it remains far from rare, with estimates placing the annual number in the U.S. around a half-million.

Unlike in the past, when it comes to tonsil infections, doctors are much more likely to employ a watch-and-wait approach. That means only resorting to surgery, which brings risks, when they determine that infections recur often and cannot be treated through other means, such as antibiotic­s and medication­s to manage pain.

James, a physician-scientist, is executive vice president and chief medical officer of the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation. Cohen is a marathoner and OMRF’s senior vice president and general counsel. Submit your health questions to contact@omrf.org.

 ?? Body Work Adam Cohen and Dr. Judith James Guest columnists ??
Body Work Adam Cohen and Dr. Judith James Guest columnists
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States