Adenoid and chronic tonsil problems, which are generally genetically inherited, often develop on an allergic basis.
Tonsils normally have a protective function of filtering the air entering the mouth. However, once it gets an infection (especially the infection known as BETA), it can be suppressed with antibiotics since it settles in the tissue, but it continues to recur frequently.
We can explain it like this; Tonsils are sponge-like tissues. If you soap the sponge once and wash it 100 times, the soap will flow again in the 101st wash. Once the tonsil acquires the BETA microbe, it is suppressed with each antibiotic use and is triggered again when the body finds its resistance low.
The main BETA microbe settled in the tonsils is the main cause. The risk is that it may cause joint and heart-related complications, especially in childhood. Apart from this, complications such as loss of appetite, growth and development retardation, and attention deficit that will affect the patient's entire life are often observed.
For these reasons, during follow-ups, the patient has three or more fevers within a year, requiring the use of antibiotics. If the patient has a tonsil infection, it is evaluated that it does more harm than good, does not function as a filter and has become the focus of infection, and it is recommended to remove the damaging tonsil. Only in this way can the patient be protected from more serious complications. Since tonsils are only accessory tissue, when they are removed, no deficiency will be felt in the body for a lifetime.
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