Small bleeding spots on the jaw are mostly suggestive of tonsillitis, which is an inflammation of the tonsils. Clinically, there are two types of tonsillitis: acute and chronic. The main symptoms are sore throat, fever and discomfort in the throat. This disease can cause local or systemic complications in the ear, nose, as well as heart, kidney and joints, so it should be taken seriously. How can small bleeding spots on the jaw be examined? The following are the examination methods for small bleeding spots in the jaw: the tonsils are congested and swollen, most of them have yellowish-white purulent secretions at the mouth of the trap, and the symptoms are worse in the case of follicular suppuration, and there are small yellowish-white abscesses under the mucosa. The patient has swollen and painful lymph nodes in the angle of the jaw and elevated white blood cells in the blood. Chronic tonsillitis has no obvious conscious symptoms, but may have a dry throat, foreign body sensation, etc. There is often a history of repeated acute tonsillitis episodes, and in children, excessive tonsillar hypertrophy may affect breathing and swallowing. On examination, chronic congestion of the tongue and palate arch, chronic congestion or scarring of the tonsils, caseous pus at the trap, and enlarged lymph nodes in the mandibular angle are seen. Pharyngeal disorders that need to be differentiated from acute tonsillitis include pharyngeal diphtheria, Winsor’s pharyngitis, mucocytopenic pharyngitis, ulcerative pharyngitis, and pharyngeal keratosis. Tonsillitis can cause a variety of complications, such as peri-tonsillar abscess, rheumatism, acute glomerulonephritis, arthritis, and myocarditis.