Adenoids, or pharyngeal tonsils, are folds of lymphatic tissue covered by ciliated epithelium. They are found in the roof and posterior wall of the nasopharynx at the back of the throat behind the uvula.
Sleep apnea, recurrent infection of the adenoids, or distorted speech are also reasons for adenoidectomy. The procedure is often carried out at the same time as a tonsillectomy. Adenoidectomy is also performed on patients who have chronic ear infections caused by the adenoids blocking the eustachian tube.
In Roald Dahl's autobiography Tales of Childhood, the removal of his adenoids as a child is described. At that time, no anaesthetic was used.
The 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica suggested: "Operations should not be performed in cold weather or in piercing east winds, and it is advisable to keep the child indoors for a day or two subsequent to its performance. To expose a child just after operating on his throat to the risks of a journey by train or omnibus is highly inadvisable."
Lymphatic system | Head and neck
אדנואיד | Neusamandel | Kitarisa | Adenoid | Аденоїди