logo
  • Entries
  • Comment
  • Popular
Recent Posts
  • Asthma in the Child Care Setting
  • Disagreeing With Your Pediatrician?
  • How to care for your baby’s gums and emerging teeth
  • Problems in new born babies
Recent Comments
  • to in Is Yoga Good for Your Baby?
  • 150w in Understanding Facial Hair Removal
  • Residential in Common Eye Infections - Signs and T…
  • TODD in Understanding Facial Hair Removal
Popular Articles
  • Common Eye Infections - Signs and Treatment (2)
  • Is Yoga Good for Your Baby? (2)
  • Understanding Facial Hair Removal (2)
  • Migraine Headache Symptom (1)
  • Home
  • About
  • Custom Size Sheets
  • Round Crib
  • Baby Pillow Cases

Tonsillitis

icon1 Posted by admin in baby-health on 05 8th, 2009 | no responses

 

Open Mouth – Tonsils Tonsil is a mass of lymphatic tissue one each in the lateral(side) walls of the nasopharynx(where the far end of the nasal cavity meets with the oral cavity)the size of almonds. The basic function of these tissues is to provide resistance against disease and they normally subside by the time the kids are in their teens. The problem arises when they get inflamed and enlarged and start interfering with normal swallowing and eating. Infection of the tonsils is commonly seen in school going children.

Signs and symptoms:
Pain at the angle of the jaw and also sometimes in the ear.
Difficulty in swallowing.
Fever is often present.
Foul breath.
Inflamed oral cavity.

Treatment:
    * It normally would consist of antibiotics for 7- 10 days, analgesics(pain relievers) and warm saline gargles.

Complications:
    * Greatly enlarged tonsils, i.e. when tonsils meet each other in midline, can lead to difficulty in breathing.

    * Attacks of acute tonsillitis can be associated with recurrent attacks of pain & infection in the ears.

    * When certain bacteria are the causative organisms of acute tonsillitis and the infection is not resolved it may lead to heart disease in these patients.

    * A child suffering from recurrent attacks has a slow development & frequently misses out on school.

    * In adults, recurrent attacks of acute tonsillitis can predispose to formation of intraoral abscesses which then present as emergencies.

Surgery for Tonsillitis:
If the child is having recurrent attacks (approximately two attacks in a month); when tonsils are interfering with speech swallowing & respiration; when there is risk of developing heart disease then surgery to remove the tonsils( tonsillectomy ) should definitely be considered.

No related posts.

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

No Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL

Leave a comment

*
To prove that you're not a bot, enter this code
Anti-Spam Image

Recent Posts

  • Asthma in the Child Care Setting
  • Disagreeing With Your Pediatrician?
  • How to care for your baby’s gums and emerging teeth
  • Problems in new born babies
  • Pertussis in the Child Care Setting
  • Common Eye Infections – Signs and Treatment
  • Understanding Facial Hair Removal
  • Is Yoga Good for Your Baby?
  • Bone Loss Prevention
  • Round Crib Mattress

Categories

  • baby-health
  • Beddings
  • Motherhood
  • tips
  • women-health

Archives

  • November 2009
  • October 2009
  • September 2009
  • June 2009
  • May 2009
  • April 2009

Blogroll

  • Development Blog
  • Documentation
  • Plugins
  • Suggest Ideas
  • Support Forum
  • Themes
  • WordPress Planet

Search

Meta:

  • RSS
  • Comments RSS
  • Valid XHTML
© Copyright Custom Bed Sheets 2008. All rights reserved. | Powered by Wordpress | Designed by Elegant WPT