thread: Article: Tonsil Removal May Cure ADHD Behaviour in Kids

  1. #1
    BellyBelly Life Member

    Jul 2004
    House of the crazy cat ladies...
    3,793

    Article: Tonsil Removal May Cure ADHD Behaviour in Kids

    This is really quite interesting....
    TUCSON, Ariz. -- Little T.J. was a monster. There's no other way to say it.
    Extremely hyperactive, the toddler ran around in circles, destroying everything in his path. He choked the cat and dragged it by its tail. He bit the teacher and hit other kids. He got kicked out of day care and banned from friends' homes.
    His own grandmother called the 2-year-old a "monster." Friends told his family that T.J. _ short for Terence Johnson _ was destined to be "the next serial killer."
    "He was so out of control, I was at my wits' end," said his mother, Heather Norton. "It is hurtful to realize nobody likes your child. Even my family didn't want him to come to events or reunions. Everyone kept telling me he's got to get help."
    That was then.
    Today, as T.J. gets ready to turn 3, he is a changed boy. Lively, to be sure, but affectionate instead of mean and aggressive.
    "It's a total turnaround _ this is a different child," his mother said. "He's a normal, active toddler now. He responds to punishment for the first time. He gives us hugs. He says, 'I love you.' He's learning to share. Everybody notices the difference."
    A frontal lobotomy? Electroshock therapy? Powerful drugs? No.
    T.J. had his tonsils out.
    As medical studies are beginning to confirm, the removal of a child's tonsils can, in some cases, significantly improve, even cure, severe hyperactivity often diagnosed as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD.
    Now affecting more than 2 million U.S. children, ADHD most often is treated with controversial psychoactive drugs, sometimes taken for a lifetime.
    But in a significant number of these children _ as many as half of those with an ADHD diagnosis, in one study _ simply removing the tonsils also has removed the diagnosis, by restoring normal behavior.
    "Sometimes you get really great results, sometimes you see partial results in these children," said Dr. Damian Parkinson, a psychiatrist who has been working with T.J. at Pantano Behavioral Services. Parkinson was the first to suggest T.J.'s terrible behavior might be related to his tonsils.
    The key to making that connection is how the child sleeps. Snoring, restlessness, apnea, and gasping for breath during the night are clearly linked to hyperactive daytime behavior in very young children. And enlarged or infected tonsils and adenoids _ immune-related tissue masses in the back and upper throat _ most often are the cause of what's known as "sleep-disordered breathing."
    "What I look for is the child who comes in with typical ADHD symptoms _ he's hyper, not listening, acting impulsively, hitting other kids _ but who also has trouble sleeping," Parkinson said. "If the parents notice, and the child is congested and breathing through the mouth, that makes me wonder if the tonsils are the source of the whole problem."
    That's pretty much the story of T.J.'s young life.
    "He never slept through the night, since he was a baby," his mother said.
    Always, T.J. snored _ so loudly his older brother had to move out of his room _ and had a chronically runny nose. But never in her wildest dreams did his mother think any of this was linked to T.J.'s behavior.
    Unlike older children and adults, this lack of restful sleep _ and resulting oxygen deprivation _ does not produce daytime sleepiness and fatigue in very young kids. It tends to make them hyper.
    "Chronic loss of sleep can drive kids crazy, and the less sleep they get, the more crazy they get," said Dr. Brice Kopas, T.J.'s pediatrician. "T.J. was impossible. He just could not sit still, for even a second or two."
    But what has been less clear, until recently, is the direct effect of tonsil and adenoid removal on easing, even eliminating, full-fledged ADHD, in children who have sleep problems.
    In one recent study, at the University of Michigan, 22 children with ADHD and sleep-disordered breathing had adenotonsillectomies. After one year, 11 no longer battled ADHD.
    "These improvements are remarkable because hyperactivity and inattention generally are expected to be chronic features in affected school-age children," the researchers wrote in a report published last year in the journal Pediatrics.
    As a result of this and other recent studies, "doctors conducting healthy-child checkups should always ask about snoring, poor sleep, behavioral and learning problems, and look for physical signs such as enlarged tonsils and adenoids," reads a summary of the issue published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in June.
    And if all those signs converge, surgery is really the only option, said Dr. Sanford Newmark, a Tucson pediatrician who practices integrative medicine, using both mainstream and alternative therapies.
    "There really is no other way to deal with it. The tonsils and adenoids are what obstruct the upper airway when a child lies down to sleep, so you have to get them out if that is happening."
    Missing this in young children can mean profound, even life-threatening effects _ including heart and lung damage, and permanent cognitive deficits _ if disrupted sleep persists for five years or longer.
    "That's what clinched it for us. As soon as we heard that, we knew we wanted the surgery for T.J.," Norton said.
    And so, the "little tyrant," as he was sometimes known, had his tonsils and adenoids out in April at University Medical Center. His surgeon, Dr. David Parry _ Tucson's only pediatric ear, nose and throat specialist _ had found them "grossly enlarged."
    Tonsils and adenoids swell when they mount an immune response to fight germs.
    "Once that is done, they should go back to normal size, but in some kids they don't," Parry said. "That may be the result of a chronic low-grade infection that goes undetected."
    The positive effects showed up almost immediately, his mother said.
    "Right away, he started sleeping through the night, for the first time in his life. No snoring, no gurgling, no sleeping all over the bed," she said.
    "When his behavior changed, we just didn't believe it at first. We thought it had to be the pain medicine. But it's four months later now.
    "He's a normal child."

  2. #2
    Registered User

    Aug 2006
    On the other side of this screen!!!
    11,129

    WHAT?? That's amazing, it'll be interesting to see if this results in a new wave of tonsillectomies (It was very trendy surgery in the 60s and 70s)...!

  3. #3
    Registered User

    Sep 2004
    Sydney's Norwest
    4,954

    Cool, does that mean I can rip Joels tonsil's out ?? I'd gladly do it without the anesthetic atm

  4. #4
    Registered User

    Jun 2006
    Apparently in about 7 months I will be a qualified midwife - yikes!
    1,248

    I would have to agree with this!

    Although my son was not diagnosed with adhd, his behaviour, sleeping, eating and speech were all terrible. A big part of the problem for him was ear infection and frustration at not being able to communicate properly mixed with the sleep deprivation, as soon as he recovered from the op, which was grommits and adnoids ( for a second time) as well as the tonsils, he was like a completely different child!

    I would do it all over again to get the change that we have had.

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Aug 2006
    ex-Melbourne girl in Hong Kong
    308

    What an amazing observation. It makes sense in many ways. My brother was all Ritalined up for much of his childhood and was a very heavy snorer as a child. I wonder if an adenotonsilectomy could have helped him?

  6. #6
    Registered User

    Aug 2007
    N.S.W
    503

    Thats interesting. My niece has ADHD. I will have to tell my siser.

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Apr 2007
    SE QLD
    2,321

    OMG - Jensen snores! What am I in for?

  8. #8
    belmarks Guest

    Coby is going in for a tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy in the next couple of weeks. He is not ADHD, but has always snored, been a restless sleeper, and a full on baby and now a full on toddler. I am sure that this will help him in so many ways once he has all this stuff removed. He will be getting more oxygen, have a more settled mind and definitely be getting better sleeps and therefore won't be as cranky....

  9. #9
    Registered User

    Jan 2008
    Mid North Coast NSW
    24

    OMG! My DS isn't ADHD but he is a very full on toddler. He has never slept real well and is cranky and moody most days from the lack of sleep. He has an appointment with a paediatric ENT in February to have a tonsillectomy because he has grossly enlarged tonsils which have caused him to lose nearly 2 kgs in weight and have difficulty breathing when he sleeps. Well i'm hoping that once he has the surgery that he too may settle down a bit because at the moment i just can't keep up with him and he frustrates me with his naughty behaviour. This article has helped ease my worries and i'm hoping that after the surgery he may not be such a hyperactive toddler and we may all get some well earned rest