Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/14604
Title: CORRELATION BETWEEN TONSIL HYPERTROPHY AND ALLERGIC RHINITIS IN CHILDREN
Authors: Kopacheva Barsova, Gabriela 
Dukovska, Vesna
Nikoloska, Sofija
Trajkov, Dejan 
Keywords: allergic rhinitis
children
nasal concha
volume of palatine tonsils
volume of adenoid vegetation
correlation
Issue Date: 25-Dec-2020
Publisher: Macedonian Association of Anatomists
Journal: Journal of Morphological Sciences
Abstract: To show whether there is a correlation between the tonsils hypertrophy and adenoid hypertrophy (AH) with allergic rhinitis in children in R. Macedonia. A total of 120 children (5.3 ± 1.2 years old)with tonsil hypertrophy, adenoid hypertrophy, persistent upper respiratory infections and consecutive nasal obstruction were examined, after their parents gave a verbal consent for their participation. Inclusion criteria were: frequent upper respiratory infections, angina, nasal congestion due to nasal obstruction caused by adenoid hypertrophy, frequent serous otitis due to adenoid hypertrophy and sleep apnea due to tonsil hypertrophy.The prevalence of allergic rhinitis (AR) was as follows: AR had 70% of children with concha nasal hypertrophy, 39.2% of children with tonsillar hypertrophy, and 78.3% of children with adenoid hypertrophy. Although in the group of children with adenoid hypertrophy, a more severe degree of nasal concha hypertrophy was registered in children with AR compared to children without AR, itwasstatistically not significant.Regarding children with adenoid hypertrophy (AH), the results showed that children with AR presented significantly different results for Parikh's scale (p = 0.0076). Obstruction of torus tubarius was more common in children with AR (86.8% vs. 61.2%), while these children had a finding of soft palate obstruction (9.4% vs.26.8%), and vomer obstruction (3.8% vs.11.9%) less often than children without AR.Our study found that almost half of the children with tonsillitis/adenoid hypertrophy hadAR. Grade 3 and 4 TH was present in third of the children.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12188/14604
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Medicine: Journal Articles

Show full item record

Page view(s)

71
checked on Apr 29, 2024

Google ScholarTM

Check


Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.