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if they have to be removed at an early age sometimes!
I say it just sucks. One of my 7-month old twins was discharged from hospital yesterday, diagnosed with acute tonsillitis.
But what w1z4rd says makes sense, as he also has an upper respiratory tract infection.
He has not been a happy-camper, but seems to be on the mend.
I dont have my tonsils at the moment and am fighting upper respiratory tract infection.. its now being about a week. Ironically my wife has tonsillitis at the same time... haha. What I have noticed, is she is way better already and I am still sickThough for a short time her throat was worse than mine.
I say its similar to your wisdom teeth, its a way of making money for doctors.
I am quite involved in with schools around Pretoria in the past 3 years all the students who had 100% school attendance from 4 schools in Pretoria didn't have their tonsils removed. Just an interesting observation I made![]()
I guess one must be willing to wait it out until the swelling goes down. I think mine were removed when I was 2yo. Now my 2yo son has had 2-3 infections in the last 2 months.
HAHA, sorry... just had to laugh at that part... are they planning on returning any time soon?![]()
I always thought tonsils were the evolutionary remains of our gills.![]()
current thinking is not to remove. treat with antibiotics until infection clears. why destroy your first line of defence anyway?
Some doctors who are not ear, nose and throat (ENT) specialists are conservative on recommending the removal of tonsils[citation needed], because the tissue cannot be put back, and some claim that removal decreases the power of the immune system[citation needed]. ENT specialists generally recommend removal if there are frequent recurrent tonsillitis, adenotonsillar hyperplasia causing symptomatic partial upper airway obstruction or asymmetry