Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine
Volume 15, Issue 8 , Pages 516-518, November 2008

Tonsillitis and sudden childhood death

  • Roger W. Byard (MD Marks Professor of Pathology)

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationTel.: +618 8303 5441; fax: +618 8303 4408.

Discipline of Pathology, The University of Adelaide, Frome Road, Level 3, Medical School North Building, Adelaide 5005, Australia

Received 28 January 2008; accepted 10 April 2008.

Abstract 

Critical reduction in upper airway diameter may result from tonsillar enlargement due to infection or from associated abscess formation. Other potentially lethal complications include hemorrhage and disseminated sepsis. Two cases are reported to illustrate features of specific cases: Case 1: a 12-year-old girl who exsanguinated from a pharyngocarotid fistula caused by a retropharyngeal abscess due to acute tonsillitis, and Case 2: a 17-year-old girl who asphyxiated from an aspirated blood clot following tonsillectomy. While most cases of acute tonsillitis resolve without sequelae, occasional cases may be associated with a lethal outcome. Massive hemorrhage may occur due to erosion of tonsillar vessels or subjacent larger vessels, or it may follow surgical extirpation of the tonsils. The autopsy assessment of cases where there has been possible lethal tonsillar pathology requires review of the presenting history and possible operative procedures, with careful dissection of Waldeyer’s ring, adjacent soft tissues and major vessels. Presentations may not be straightforward and there may be misleading histories of epistaxis, hemoptysis, hematemesis and even melena.

Keywords: Tonsil, Adenoid, Hemorrhage, Asphyxia, Sepsis, Sudden death, Childhood

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PII: S1752-928X(08)00073-5

doi:10.1016/j.jflm.2008.04.005

Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine
Volume 15, Issue 8 , Pages 516-518, November 2008