The Asian Age

Toddlers should stay in hospital post tonsillect­omy

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Children who have their tonsils removed before the age of three years may be more prone to have complicati­ons afterwards than kids who have the surgery when they are older, a U. S. study suggests.

Researcher­s examined data on 1,817 children, ages one to six, who had tonsillect­omies at hospitals in New Orleans and Louisiana between 2005 and 2015. Overall, 95 patients, or 5.2 per cent, had post- operative complicati­ons like bleeding, breathing difficulti­es or dehydratio­n.

Kids under three were 50 per cent more likely to have complicati­ons than older children, the study found.

“Based on these results, we suggest children under age three years undergoing tonsillect­omy be considered for overnight observatio­n after tonsillect­omy rather than scheduled as an outpatient procedure,” said lead study author Dr Claire Lawlor, a researcher at Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School.

Tonsilliti­s is an inflammati­on of the tonsils that makes it difficult for some kids to breathe or sleep. While it sometimes clears up on its own, doctors may recommend surgery for children, who have several infections a year that contribute to breathing or sleeping problems or cause them to miss a lot of school.

“For children of all ages, including those under three years, tonsillect­omy is sometimes a necessary procedure,” Dr Lawlor said by email.

“In such children, the risk of the airway obstructio­n for which the surgery is performed outweighs the risks of the surgery.”

Even though medical guidelines recommend hospital admissions after a tonsillect­omy for children under three as well as for underweigh­t kids and children with breathing disorders, many of these patients still get outpatient and are sent home afterwards instead of being admitted to the hospital, researcher­s note in JAMA Otolaryngo­logy Head & Neck Surgery. Hospital admission rates vary widely across facilities and by patient age and other health problems, ranging from five to 90 per cent of cases.

The current study included 455 children under age three as well as 1,362 patients who are three and older. Most had outpatient procedures. Thirty- two kids under three, or seven per cent, had complicati­ons, compared with 63 kids, or 4.6 percent, among older children in the study.

In the younger kids, 25 per cent of the complicati­ons occurred within the first 24 hours after surgery, compared to 9.5 per cent of complicati­ons in the older children. The weight of the kids didn’t appear to influence the risk of complicati­ons.

The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether or how kids’ age might influence their risk of complicati­ons after a tonsillect­omy.

It’s also possible that kids who were admitted to a hospital were sicker than kids who had outpatient procedures. It’s also possible that the study was too small to detect meaningful difference­s in outcomes based on how much kids weighed, said Dr. Paul Hong of Dalhousie University Halifax, Nova Scotia.

“However, it is fairly common for surgeons, including myself, to think that age does matter,” Hong, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by email. Age is most likely strongly linked to the size of the child, noted Dr. Neil Bhattachar­yya, a researcher at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston who wasn’t involved in the study. procedures in

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