Bleeding, foreign body sensation in the nasopharynx and ear stuffiness may occur after the surgery of children’s adenoids, but overall serious sequelae are less likely to occur.
1. Bleeding: If adenoidectomy damages deep blood vessels, it may cause intraoperative bleeding, and may also trigger postoperative bleeding, which may result in choking in severe cases.
2. Nasopharyngeal foreign body sensation: children with keloid scarring may experience scarring in the nasopharynx after the operation, which may cause a foreign body sensation in the nasopharynx after the operation.
3. Tightness in the ears: adenoids are in the middle of the nasopharynx, flanked by the pharyngeal opening of the Eustachian tube. If adenoid surgery damages the pharyngeal opening of the Eustachian tube, it may result in the Eustachian tube not being smooth, which affects the function of the Eustachian tube, and the child may suffer from tightness in the ears and other symptoms.
To summarize, adenoidectomy should be operated by professional doctors, and serious postoperative sequelae and complications are rare, but when discomfort occurs, it is necessary to actively diagnose and treat the disease.