Today, there are guidelines for performing a tonsillectomy that should be met before surgery is performed. If these guidelines are not met, the patient may find that insurance will not pay for the procedure, as it is not considered necessary.
Even with the current guidelines, a tonsillectomy is a very common procedure with over 250,000 performed annually in the United States. Most tonsillectomy patients are children who have infected tonsils. Most adults who have their tonsils removed are doing so to improve sleep apnea, but there are the occasional but rare cases of adults who have their tonsils removed due to recurrent infections.
While tonsillitis does make your throat hurt, a sore throat isn’t necessarily tonsillitis. With tonsillitis at least one of the palatine tonsils are swollen and infected. The adenoids, a different set of tonsils, can also become infected and painful and may be removed with the palatine tonsils if necessary.
Reasons for Tonsillectomy
Chronic bleeding: from one or both tonsils Chronic tonsillitis: five or more bouts of tonsillitis in the course of a year OR three episodes per year for two years in a row OR tonsillitis does not respond to antibiotic therapy Cryptic tonsils or tonsilloliths: tonsils that collect particles, which harden and become stone-like lumps Abscess of the tonsil: a collection of pus within the tonsil Chronic bad breath: caused by infection in the tonsils Kissing tonsils: Tonsils so enlarged that they touch in the middle of the mouth/throat Obstructive sleep apnea: large tonsils can narrow the airway, making sleep apnea worse Suspicion of cancer
Reasons for an Adenoidectomy
Repeated infection of the adenoidsAdenoid infections that cause ear infections or hearing problemsAdenoid infections that do not respond to antibiotics