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Keywords = tonsil hyperplasia

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12 pages, 1106 KiB  
Article
Machine Learning Analysis of Lipid and Metabolic Profiles in Adults with Adenoid Hyperplasia
by Mansur Doğan, Merve Çiftçi and Yusuf Yeşil
Medicina 2025, 61(6), 1018; https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina61061018 - 29 May 2025
Viewed by 159
Abstract
Background and Objectives: The nasopharynx, unlike other pharyngeal regions, includes an important part of the immune system, called the adenoid (nasopharyngeal tonsil); its posterior wall contains lymphoid tissue belonging to Waldeyer’s ring. Nasopharyngeal posterior wall thickness is often associated with adenoid hyperplasia [...] Read more.
Background and Objectives: The nasopharynx, unlike other pharyngeal regions, includes an important part of the immune system, called the adenoid (nasopharyngeal tonsil); its posterior wall contains lymphoid tissue belonging to Waldeyer’s ring. Nasopharyngeal posterior wall thickness is often associated with adenoid hyperplasia in adults. The current study aimed to compare the blood lipid and metabolic profiles of adult patients with increased nasopharyngeal posterior wall thickness to those of the healthy population. Materials and Methods: This study included a cohort of 98 patients, 52 in the control group and 46 diagnosed with increased nasopharyngeal posterior wall thickness due to adenoid hyperplasia. Clinical and biochemical data were collected from medical records at Sivas Cumhuriyet University and Erbaa State Hospital between January 2024 and March 2025. The dataset consisted of the following 11 features: age, sex, total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein (LDL), high-density lipoprotein (HDL), triglycerides, fasting blood glucose, glycated hemoglobin (HbA1C), C-reactive protein (CRP), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), and aspartate aminotransferase (AST). Results: HDL was significantly lower in the adenoid hyperplasia group (mean = 48.68, SD = 21.87) compared to the control group (mean = 51.31, SD = 11.80; Kruskal–Wallis H = 4.750, p = 0.029), with a small effect size (Cohen’s d = −0.156). ALT was higher in the adenoid hyperplasia group (mean = 26.35, SD = 16.93 vs. 20.88, SD = 11.42; permutation test p = 0.082), suggesting a trend toward significance. HbA1C had a higher mean in the adenoid hyperplasia group (7.88, SD = 9.82 vs. 6.18, SD = 1.18; p = 0.852), with high variability. Conclusions: In conclusion, this study identified HDL, HbA1C, and ALT as potential biomarkers for nasopharyngeal adenoid hyperplasia, with XGBoost and SHAP providing valuable insights despite dataset constraints. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Endocrinology)
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15 pages, 3007 KiB  
Article
Sleep Apnea Syndrome in Children: A Retrospective Study of 419 Cases and Polysomnographic Findings with Implications for Rapid Treatment
by Lechosław Paweł Chmielik, Anna Kasprzyk, Zuzanna Sala, Tadeusz Chmielik, Grzegorz Jacek Hatliński, Grażyna Mielnik-Niedzielska and Artur Niedzielski
Children 2025, 12(2), 222; https://doi.org/10.3390/children12020222 - 12 Feb 2025
Viewed by 620
Abstract
Sleep-related disorders are responsible for many serious health conditions, one of these being sleep apnea syndrome, which arises through various mechanisms. Polysomnography is currently used as the gold standard method for diagnosing patients suffering from sleep breathing disorders, thus enabling accurate and swift [...] Read more.
Sleep-related disorders are responsible for many serious health conditions, one of these being sleep apnea syndrome, which arises through various mechanisms. Polysomnography is currently used as the gold standard method for diagnosing patients suffering from sleep breathing disorders, thus enabling accurate and swift clinical diagnosis. Background/Objectives: By using the parameters obtained from polysomnography, this retrospective study has aimed to determine the groups of children that are particularly vulnerable to severe forms of breathing disorders, divided according to diagnoses made of tonsillar hypertrophy forms and sleep apnea as well as by the severity grades and types of apnea, to facilitate rapid and appropriate treatment. Methods: The subjects were 419 children (from 2017 to 2024) who had been initially diagnosed with sleep apnea syndrome (36.99% girls and 63.01% boys), upon whom various parameters of polysomnography examinations were retrospectively evaluated. The subjects were broken down into groups according to three diagnoses and the types and severities of apnea. The following statistical analyses were used: Kruskal–Wallis tests, post-hoc testing and correlation. Results: Tonsillar hyperplasia was found in 334/419 subjects. The total apnea incidence was highest in the total mild severity grouping (53.33%), while the highest total apnea incidence in the apnea type grouping was found in the central apnea grouping at 31.74%, of which the highest sub-group incidence of apnea was found in those with the mild form (25.54%). The highest incidence of apnea was found in its mild form in subjects with pharyngeal and palatine tonsil hypertrophy (19.57%). The highest apnea incidence for those initially diagnosed with sleep apnea was 10.74% for the central apnea type. Children with hypertrophy of the pharyngeal tonsil and palatine tonsils had the more severe form of apnea than in the other cases in terms of AHI. Apnea severity, AHI, ODI and BS below 89% were highest/longest in the peripheral apnea type, whereas the REM sleep time %-age was lowest in this type. Strong positive correlations were found between AHI with ODI and sleep time below 89%, whereas strong negative correlations were found between AHI with average and minimum saturation variables. Conclusions: Polysomnography findings of especially mild or severe sleep apnea in children with tonsillar hyperplasia should indicate that surgical treatment is needed as soon as possible. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Pediatric Pulmonary and Sleep Medicine)
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13 pages, 1014 KiB  
Article
Anatomic Features of the Nasal and Pharyngeal Region Do Not Influence PAP Therapy Response
by Christopher Seifen, Nadine Angelina Schlaier, Johannes Pordzik, Anna-Rebekka Staufenberg, Christoph Matthias, Haralampos Gouveris and Katharina Bahr-Hamm
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20(16), 6580; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20166580 - 15 Aug 2023
Viewed by 1528
Abstract
The objective of this study was to investigate to which extent anatomic features of the nasal and pharyngeal region contribute to the severity of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and positive airway pressure (PAP) therapy response. Therefore, 93 patients (mean age 57.5 ± 13.0 [...] Read more.
The objective of this study was to investigate to which extent anatomic features of the nasal and pharyngeal region contribute to the severity of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and positive airway pressure (PAP) therapy response. Therefore, 93 patients (mean age 57.5 ± 13.0 years, mean body mass index 32.2 ± 5.80 kg/m2, 75 males, 18 females) diagnosed with OSA who subsequently started PAP therapy were randomly selected from the databank of a sleep laboratory of a tertiary university medical center. Patients were subdivided based on nasal anatomy (septal deviation, turbinate hyperplasia, their combination, or none of the above), pharyngeal anatomy (webbing, tonsillar hyperplasia, their combination, or none of the above), and (as a separate group) tongue base anatomy (no tongue base hyperplasia or tongue base hyperplasia). Then, polysomnographic data (e.g., arousal index, ARI; respiratory disturbance index, RDI; apnea index, AI; hypopnea index, HI; and oxygen desaturation index, ODI) of diagnostic polysomnography (PSG) and PAP therapy control PSG were collected, grouped, and evaluated. Septal deviation, turbinate hyperplasia, or their combination did not significantly affect the assessed PSG parameters or the response to PAP therapy compared with patients without nasal obstruction (p > 0.05 for all parameters). Accordingly, most PSG parameters and the response to PAP therapy were not significantly affected by webbing, tonsil hyperplasia, or their combination compared with patients without pharyngeal obstruction (p > 0.05 for RDI, AI, HI, and ODI, respectively). However, in the pharyngeal anatomy group, ARI was significantly higher in patients with tonsil hyperplasia (p = 0.018). Further, patients with tongue base hyperplasia showed a significantly higher HI in the diagnostic PSG (p = 0.025) compared with patients with normal tongue base anatomy, but tongue base anatomy did not significantly affect the response to PAP therapy (p > 0.05 for all parameters). The influence of anatomic features of the nasal and pharyngeal region on PAP therapy response appears to be small, and generalizability of these results requires further studies. Full article
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9 pages, 243 KiB  
Article
Correlation between Malocclusions, Tonsillar Grading and Mallampati Modified Scale: A Retrospective Observational Study
by Can Serif Kuskonmaz, Giovanni Bruno, Maria Lavinia Bartolucci, Michele Basilicata, Antonio Gracco and Alberto De Stefani
Children 2023, 10(6), 1061; https://doi.org/10.3390/children10061061 - 14 Jun 2023
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 1975
Abstract
Aim: to investigate the correlation between growth tendency and different patient malocclusion, tonsillar grading, and tongue size (Mallampati index). Materials and Methods: The sample is composed of 64 males and 40 females; patients aged between 6 and 16 years (median age 11 years, [...] Read more.
Aim: to investigate the correlation between growth tendency and different patient malocclusion, tonsillar grading, and tongue size (Mallampati index). Materials and Methods: The sample is composed of 64 males and 40 females; patients aged between 6 and 16 years (median age 11 years, IQR 9–13) were included. The final sample is therefore 104 patients. After the first orthodontic visit, all the children underwent a collection of documentation (photographs, digital arch models, and X-rays). Patients were classified according to their malocclusion, palatal conformation, tonsillar grading, and Mallampati index. Group comparisons were performed using Fisher’s test. A p-value less than 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Results: The narrow palate was more frequent in those with Angle class III (p = 0.04), while the other variables considered (tonsillar grading, Mallampati, and lingual frenulum) were not significantly associated with dental class (p > 0.05). Furthermore, a different distribution of tonsillar grading was observed between subjects with normal palate and subjects with narrow palate, while no statistically significant association was found between the palatal shape and Mallampati index (p = 0.88). Conclusions: This study found that children with higher tonsillar grading had a higher prevalence of crossbite or narrow palate compared to other children at the same developmental stage. However, we did not observe any association between tonsil hyperplasia and the prevalence of class II malocclusion, anterior open bite, or patient divergence in this sample. Furthermore, no correlation was found between the Mallampati index and patients’ dental class, narrow palate, or divergence in this study. Full article
17 pages, 1922 KiB  
Article
Extracapsular Tonsillectomy versus Intracapsular Tonsillotomy in Paediatric Patients with OSAS
by Massimo Mesolella, Salvatore Allosso, Valentina Coronella, Eva Aurora Massimilla, Nicola Mansi, Giovanni Motta, Grazia Salerno and Gaetano Motta
J. Pers. Med. 2023, 13(5), 806; https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm13050806 - 8 May 2023
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 2634
Abstract
Objective: The objective of our study was to compare our experience of intracapsular tonsillotomy performed with the help of a microdebrider usually used for adenoidectomy with results obtained from extracapsular surgery through dissection and from adenoidectomy in cases of people affected with OSAS, [...] Read more.
Objective: The objective of our study was to compare our experience of intracapsular tonsillotomy performed with the help of a microdebrider usually used for adenoidectomy with results obtained from extracapsular surgery through dissection and from adenoidectomy in cases of people affected with OSAS, linked to adeno-tonsil hypertrophy, observed and treated in the last 5 years. Methods: 3127 children with adenotonsillar hyperplasia and OSAS-related clinical symptoms (aged between 3 and 12 years) underwent tonsillectomy and/or adenoidectomy. A total of 1069 patients (Group A) underwent intracapsular tonsillotomy, while 2058 patients (Group B) underwent extracapsular tonsillectomy, from January 2014 to June 2018. The parameters considered in order to evaluate the effectiveness of the two different surgery techniques taken into consideration were as follows: the presence of possible postoperative complications, represented mainly by pain and perioperative bleeding; the level of postoperative respiratory obstruction compared with the original obstruction through night pulse oximetry, performed 6 months before and after the surgery; tonsillar hypertrophy relapse in Group A and/or the presence of residues in Group B with clinical evaluation performed 1 month, 6 months, and 1 year after the surgery; and postoperative life quality, evaluated through submitting to parents the same survey proposed before the surgery 1 month, 6 months, and 1 year after the surgery. Results: Regardless of the technique used (extracapsular tonsillectomy or intracapsular tonsillotomy), there was a clear improvement in both the obstructive respiratory symptomatology and quality of life in both patient groups, as highlighted by the pulse oximetry and the OSA-18 survey submitted later. Conclusions: Intracapsular tonsillotomy surgery has improved in terms of a reduction in postoperative bleeding cases and pain reduction, with an earlier return to patients’ usual lifestyle. Lastly, using a microdebrider with the intracapsular technique seems to be particularly effective in removing most of the tonsillar lymphatic tissue, leaving only a thin border of pericapsular lymphoid tissue and preventing lymphoid tissue regrowth during one year of follow-up. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Clinical Medicine, Cell, and Organism Physiology)
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15 pages, 1234 KiB  
Article
Analysis of Tonsil Tissues from Patients Diagnosed with Chronic Tonsillitis—Microbiological Profile, Biofilm-Forming Capacity and Histology
by Marina Kostić, Marija Ivanov, Snežana Sanković Babić, Zvezdana Tepavčević, Oliver Radanović, Marina Soković and Ana Ćirić
Antibiotics 2022, 11(12), 1747; https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics11121747 - 3 Dec 2022
Cited by 13 | Viewed by 5554
Abstract
Chronic tonsillitis (CT) is a global health issue which can impair patient’s quality of life and has an important socioeconomic impact due to the nonrational use of antibiotics, increased antimicrobial resistance and frequent need for surgical treatment. In order to isolate and identify [...] Read more.
Chronic tonsillitis (CT) is a global health issue which can impair patient’s quality of life and has an important socioeconomic impact due to the nonrational use of antibiotics, increased antimicrobial resistance and frequent need for surgical treatment. In order to isolate and identify the causing agents of CT, a total of 79 postoperative palatine and adenoid tissue samples were obtained from the ENT Clinic, KBC Zvezdara, Belgrade, Serbia. Culture identification was performed by MALDI-TOF MS and the Staphylococcus aureus isolates were tested for biofilm forming capability and antibiotic susceptibility. Additionally, a histological examination of palatine and adenoid tissue was performed in order to detect the presence of CT-causing bacteria. The slight majority of participants were females with median age of 28 years for adult patients (group I) and 6 years for children (group II). Analysis of the incidence of bacteria isolated from tissue samples in both groups showed the highest prevalence of S. aureus, Streptococcus oralis and Streptococcus parasanquinis. In addition to interfollicular hyperplasia, colonies of species S. aureus were detected in histological material. The presence of biofilm might be the reason for the recurrence of infection. Therefore, searching for a new treatment of CT is of great importance. Full article
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17 pages, 2611 KiB  
Article
Impact of Superantigen-Producing Bacteria on T Cells from Tonsillar Hyperplasia
by Fiona J Radcliff, Sharon Waldvogel-Thurlow, Fiona Clow, Murali Mahadevan, James Johnston, Gen Li, Thomas Proft, Richard G Douglas and John D Fraser
Pathogens 2019, 8(3), 90; https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens8030090 - 27 Jun 2019
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 4126
Abstract
Staphylococcus aureus and Group A Streptococcus (GAS) are common occupants of the tonsils and many strains produce potent exotoxins (mitogens) that directly target T cells, which could be a driver for tonsillar hyperplasia. Tonsil tissues from 41 patients were tested for these bacteria [...] Read more.
Staphylococcus aureus and Group A Streptococcus (GAS) are common occupants of the tonsils and many strains produce potent exotoxins (mitogens) that directly target T cells, which could be a driver for tonsillar hyperplasia. Tonsil tissues from 41 patients were tested for these bacteria in conjunction with profiling of B and T cells by flow cytometry. S. aureus and GAS were detected in tonsil tissue from 44% and 7%, respectively, of patients by bacteriological culture; immuno-histology showed bacteria in close proximity to both B and T lymphocytes. The presence of tonsillar S. aureus did not alter B or T cell populations, whereas peripheral blood mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells were significantly increased in S. aureus culture positive individuals (p < 0.006). Alterations of tonsil CD4+ TCR Vβ family members relative to peripheral blood were evident in 29 patients. Three patients had strong TCR Vβ skewing indicative of recent exposure to superantigens, their tonsils contained mitogenic bacteria, and supernatants from these bacteria were used to partially recapitulate the skewing profile in vitro, supporting the notion that superantigens can target tonsillar T cells in situ. Tonsils are a reservoir for superantigen-producing bacteria with the capacity to alter the composition and function of key immune cells. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Human Pathogens)
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5 pages, 2173 KiB  
Article
Correlation between throat-related symptoms and histological examination in adults with chronic tonsillitis
by Rūta Pribuišienė, Valdas Šarauskas, Alina Kuzminienė and Virgilijus Uloza
Medicina 2015, 51(5), 286-290; https://doi.org/10.1016/j.medici.2015.09.003 - 23 Oct 2015
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 1102
Abstract
Objective: The aim of the study was to evaluate correlations between throat-related symptoms and histological findings in adults with chronic tonsillitis.
Materials and methods: A prospective cohort study was carried out. Throat-related symptoms (complaints, tonsillitis rate, and pharyngeal findings) of 81 [...] Read more.
Objective: The aim of the study was to evaluate correlations between throat-related symptoms and histological findings in adults with chronic tonsillitis.
Materials and methods: A prospective cohort study was carried out. Throat-related symptoms (complaints, tonsillitis rate, and pharyngeal findings) of 81 adults with histologically proven chronic tonsillitis followed by tonsillectomy were analyzed. Four types of histological changes in removed tonsils were determined: (1) pure hyperplasia, (2) chronic inflammation, (3) chronic inflammation with hyperplasia, (4) chronic inflammation with scarring/fibrosis. The power of correlation was tested using the Pearson contingency coefficient (CC).
Results: Recurrent throat infections were the most common complaint (74.1%). The mean tonsillitis rate was 3.6 (SD 1.9) episodes per year. Tonsillar cryptic debris (61.7%) and hyperemia of the anterior pillars (59.3%) were the most common pharyngeal findings. Chronic inflammation with hyperplasia was predominant (38.3%) histological type of chronic tonsillitis. The statistically significant correlations between histological type and combination of tonsillitis rate ≥3 times per year with cryptic debris (CC = 0.346; P = 0.010) and cryptic debris alone (CC = 0.294; P = 0.051) were detected.
Conclusions: Assessment of throat-related symptoms is complementary to histological examination in adults with chronic tonsillitis. Full article
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