每當有患者一進診間,還沒坐穩就先皺著眉頭跟我說:「醫生,我喉嚨好像又卡東西了,而且最近口臭好嚴重,同事都有點避著我……」我心裡就大概知道,八成又是扁桃腺結石在作怪。
很多人以為那只是「喉嚨髒髒的」,刷刷牙、用力漱口就好。但其實,它背後反映的是局部免疫與代謝長期失衡的狀態。
扁桃體表面有很多細小的隱窩,本來是人體的免疫前哨站,負責攔截細菌與異物。當飲食偏油膩、熬夜、壓力大,或反覆感冒後,這些隱窩就容易堆積食物殘渣、脫落細胞與細菌。久而久之,這些東西鈣化,就變成我們看到的黃白色小硬塊。
更重要的是,這些結石往往不是單純的「髒東西」。現代研究發現,它們其實是活的「細菌生物膜」——細菌會分泌保護層把自己包起來,讓免疫系統與抗生素都難以清除。於是局部就一直維持在慢性低度發炎的狀態。
我常跟患者比喻:這就像城牆縫隙裡住進了一群頑強的敵人,你想把他們趕走,他們卻築起了堅固的堡壘。這時候如果只想用強效藥硬壓,往往效果有限,甚至可能讓身體更虛。
圖1. 錐狀束電腦斷層(CBCT)顯示腭扁桃體內的多發性結石(黃色箭頭與圓圈標示)
中醫把這種情況多半歸在「痰熱蘊結」或「肺胃熱盛」。痰濕與熱邪膠結在咽喉,氣機不暢,就容易反覆結塊。有些人體質偏虛,清除代謝廢物的能力本來就比較弱,更容易反覆發作。
所以中醫處理的重點,不是只把石頭「挖出來」,而是調整讓石頭不容易再長的身體環境——清熱化痰、健脾助運、必要時稍微扶正,讓身體自己有力量把局部清理乾淨。
近年來的研究讓我們對扁桃腺結石有更清楚的認識:
1. 2025年《Scientific Reports》研究:透過錐狀束電腦斷層(CBCT)分析342位患者,發現扁桃腺結石的「有無」與「大小」,都與牙周骨質流失程度有顯著正相關。結石越大,骨流失越嚴重,也更容易出現牙根分叉缺損。研究指出,結石中的微生物組成與牙菌斑生物膜高度相似,顯示口腔整體健康與扁桃腺結石其實是連動的。
2. 慢性扁桃體炎作為「病灶感染」的臨床觀察(2026):一篇發表於Cureus的長期個案報告指出,慢性扁桃體炎合併扁桃腺結石與detritus,即使局部症狀不明顯、抽血也正常,仍可能成為全身慢性低度炎症的來源,導致長期肌肉關節疼痛、反覆低燒等症狀。切除扁桃體後,患者全身症狀逐漸完全緩解。這提醒我們,結石不只是局部問題。
3. NETosis活性與慢性扁桃體炎的關聯(2023):研究直接比較慢性扁桃體炎患者與健康人,發現患者血液中NETosis比例約為健康人的2.5倍,且在扁桃體隱窩表面的抹片中,NETosis產物也明顯較多,並與疾病嚴重程度正相關。這支持「局部免疫過度活化」參與了結石與慢性發炎的惡性循環。
圖2. 中性粒細胞釋放胞外陷阱(NETosis)的顯微過程示意(黃色箭頭標示DNA釋放)
這些發現與中醫「正邪交爭、痰熱膠結」的觀點,其實有異曲同工之妙——都在提醒我們,不能只看表面的結石,更要關注背後的免疫與代謝狀態。
圖3. 腭扁桃體組織切片,清楚可見深陷的隱窩結構(Tonsillar crypt),是結石容易堆積的位置
• 減少甜食、奶製品與油炸物,降低生痰機會
• 養成飯後用淡鹽水輕輕漱口的習慣
• 避免用手指或尖銳物自行摳挖,以免受傷
• 若有慢性鼻炎或後鼻滴漏,建議一併調理
真正高明的處理,從來不是比誰的藥比較猛,而是用最順暢、對身體傷害最小的方式,幫助免疫系統把戰場清理乾淨。
如果你也長期被口臭、喉嚨卡卡感,或反覆出現的小硬塊所困擾,歡迎到青璞中醫診所讓我幫你仔細看看。我們會根據你的體質,一起找出最適合的調理方向。
1. Ustaoğlu G, Göller Bulut D, Aydin B. Association of tonsillolith characteristics with periodontal bone loss and dental pathologies: A retrospective study based on cone-beam computed tomography. Scientific Reports. 2025;15:43402. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41345277/
2. Chronic Tonsillitis as a Focal Infection: A Decade-Long Case Involving Severe Systemic Symptoms. Cureus. 2026;18(1):e100929. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41658709/
3. Kurbanova AYu, et al. Features of netosis activity of leukocytes in patients with chronic tonsillitis. Russian Otorhinolaryngology. 2023;22(4):38-47. https://doi.org/10.18692/1810-4800-2023-4-38-47
4. Understanding the Role of Biofilms in Acute Recurrent Tonsillitis through 3D Bioprinting of a Novel Gelatin-PEGDA Hydrogel. Bioengineering. 2024;11(3):202. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38534476/
免責聲明:本文僅供衛教與知識分享參考,實際治療請由合格中醫師依個人體質辨證施治。
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Cureus. 2026 Jan 6;18(1):e100929. doi: 10.7759/cureus.100929
Chronic Tonsillitis as a Focal Infection: A Decade-Long Case Involving Severe Systemic Symptoms
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Editors: Alexander Muacevic, John R Adler
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PMCID: PMC12875394 PMID: 41658709
Abstract
Unlike acute tonsillitis, which is readily recognized as infectious, chronic tonsillitis, tonsilloliths, and tonsillar detritus are often considered non-infectious and benign, despite their potential to act as focal infections causing systemic inflammatory symptoms that are frequently overlooked when tonsillar compression is not performed. We report the case of a 29-year-old female with a decade-long history of progressive musculoskeletal pain, episodic low-grade fever, headaches, and exercise-induced inflammatory arthralgia affecting the feet, ankles, wrists, and spine.
The initial otolaryngologic (ENT) evaluation revealed purulent material expressed on tonsillar compression, and tonsillectomy was recommended but deferred. Over subsequent years, the patient developed chronic plantar fasciitis, seronegative polyarthritis, and widespread pain, leading to multiple rheumatologic and autoimmune diagnoses, including an undifferentiated autoimmune syndrome. Repeated ENT examinations were largely unremarkable because tonsillar compression was not performed, and tonsillar stones or detritus were repeatedly dismissed as clinically insignificant. Laboratory investigations showed no sustained systemic inflammation, and repeated Borrelia serology yielded false-positive IgM results, prompting referral for suspected Lyme disease. Focused re-evaluation identified chronic tonsillitis as a focal infectious source. Tonsillectomy was performed a decade after symptom onset. Following surgery, the patient experienced a gradual and complete resolution of all symptoms and has remained symptom-free on long-term follow-up through the end of 2025, despite prior skepticism regarding the potential benefit of the procedure.
This report demonstrates that chronic tonsillitis, including tonsillar stones and detritus, can act as a focal infection capable of causing severe and persistent systemic inflammatory symptoms even in the absence of overt local signs or laboratory abnormalities. Failure to distinguish chronic tonsillitis from recurrent acute bacterial tonsillitis may result in prolonged morbidity and diagnostic error. Manual tonsillar compression is essential for accurate diagnosis, and tonsillectomy can be curative even after years of symptoms. Greater clinical awareness of oral and tonsillar focal infections is needed to prevent unnecessary diagnostic delays and inappropriate treatment.
Keywords: arthralgia, chronic tonsillitis, false positive borrelia test, focal disease, focal infection, sore throat, tonsillar detritus, tonsillar stone, tonsillectomy
Introduction
Chronic tonsillitis is a persistent inflammation of the tonsils that differs from recurrent acute throat infections, which are typically short-lived episodes of bacterial infection. Unlike acute infections, chronic tonsillitis may cause long-term, often nonspecific symptoms that involve multiple body systems. Importantly, these systemic manifestations can be overlooked even when patients consult an ENT specialist, potentially leading to delayed diagnosis and inappropriate management. Because patients presenting with heel pain, spinal pain, or other nonspecific systemic symptoms rarely consult an otorhinolaryngologist, the systemic consequences of tonsillar focal infections often remain unrecognized. Tonsillar detritus, although commonly regarded as a benign finding, contains significant bacterial material [1]. Tonsillar stones are generally considered to result from recurrent episodes of acute tonsillitis rather than an ongoing chronic inflammatory process [2,3]. Similarly, tonsilloliths are widely viewed as harmless; however, microbiological analyses indicate that they represent biofilm-based calcified abscesses [4].
Calcification in this context may reflect a host defensive response to persistent infection, analogous to calcium deposition observed in other chronic infectious diseases, including filariasis [5], cysticercosis [6], neurocysticercosis [7], tuberculosis [8], and toxoplasmosis [9]. Despite these parallels, chronic tonsillitis as a distinct clinical entity remains poorly characterized and is frequently underestimated in routine practice. A notable illustration of this uncertainty is found in a recent review that describes chronic tonsillitis as an “obsolete” term and recommends tonsillectomy solely based on the frequency of acute inflammatory episodes [10]. In clinical practice, chronic tonsillitis may be overlooked because standard ENT examinations do not always include manual compression of the tonsils, a procedure that is often necessary to express purulent material from subepithelial crypts. As a result, the fundamental clinical differences between recurrent acute tonsillitis and chronic tonsillitis may remain unclear (see Appendices).
Observations from a specialized outpatient service dedicated to tick-borne diseases, with clinical experience spanning several decades, indicate that many patients evaluated for suspected chronic Lyme disease instead suffer from focal infections. These patients frequently report similar, largely subjective symptoms, which increases the risk of diagnostic misattribution and may lead to treatment with sedatives or referral for psychiatric evaluation. Within this clinical setting, symptom resolution has often been observed following tonsillectomy, including in cases with long-standing complaints. While the inclusion of epidemiological data would enhance the introduction, reliable prevalence estimates are not available due to the lack of a clear distinction between chronic tonsillitis and recurrent acute bacterial tonsillitis in the literature. Nevertheless, highlighting the potential systemic impact of chronic tonsillitis provides valuable clinical context and educational value.
Case presentation
The patient, a Hungarian woman who later relocated to Austria, was 29 years old when her symptoms first became clinically significant. Her medical history included successfully treated endometriosis, with no other notable conditions. In 2011, because of allergic rhinitis and recurrent sore throats, she consulted a Hungarian otolaryngologist. Purulent discharge was observed upon tonsillar compression, and tonsillectomy was recommended; however, the risks of not undergoing surgery were not communicated, and the procedure was postponed. The patient’s illness followed a slow, progressive course, characterized by fluctuating but increasingly disabling symptoms, progressing from localized complaints to a multisystem inflammatory syndrome. Over several years, symptom severity and functional impairment increased despite repeated specialist consultations, while routine investigations repeatedly failed to reveal a unifying cause.
The patient's daily life became progressively limited by unpredictable inflammatory pain affecting the ankles and wrists, often triggered by minimal physical exertion. Periods of musculoskeletal pain were accompanied by severe headaches brought on by ordinary movements such as bending forward, as well as episodes of palpitations and shortness of breath that caused persistent anxiety despite normal cardiologic findings. At times, spinal pain and joint involvement were so debilitating that the patient required crutches to walk and was intermittently confined to bed. These symptoms substantially impaired mobility, independence, and overall quality of life, while the absence of a clear diagnosis contributed to emotional distress and uncertainty regarding prognosis and treatment.
Clinical attention focused primarily on excluding rheumatologic, neurologic, and cardiovascular disease, leading to multiple provisional diagnoses but no sustained therapeutic benefit. Otolaryngologic assessments largely concentrated on the absence of overt local inflammation, which contributed to the tonsils being excluded as a potential etiologic source. Management strategies were therefore predominantly conservative or symptomatic, influenced partly by life circumstances that limited acceptance of proposed immunomodulatory therapies. This prolonged period of diagnostic uncertainty and therapeutic fragmentation ultimately delayed recognition of a focal infectious origin, despite the persistence and progression of systemic symptoms. The complete timeline of symptoms, diagnostic activity, and treatment strategy is presented in Table 1.
Table 1. Timeline of symptoms, diagnostic activity, and treatment strategy.
MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; SLE: systemic lupus erythematosus
Year/period
Clinical events and symptoms
Evaluations and diagnoses
Treatment strategy and outcome
2011
Recurrent sore throats and allergic rhinitis
ENT evaluation in Hungary; purulent material expressed from tonsils
Tonsillectomy recommended but postponed; no etiological treatment initiated
2013
Chronic plantar fasciitis with marked functional limitation
No definitive diagnosis explaining the symptoms
Symptomatic management only; no improvement
2011–2017
Persistent tonsillar stones and intermittent throat symptoms
Repeated ENT consultations
Tonsillar findings considered benign; no targeted therapy
Early 2018
Acute worsening after neck massage; low-grade fever; ankle and wrist arthralgia; exertion-induced inflammatory pain
X-ray, cranial MRI, ankle MRI
No structural or inflammatory abnormalities identified; symptomatic treatment
Late 2018
Headaches on forward bending; palpitations and tachycardia
Cardiology evaluation
Normal findings; conservative management
2018–2019
Progressive musculoskeletal symptoms
Rheumatology evaluation
Diagnosed with seronegative polyarthritis; later undifferentiated autoimmune syndrome
January 19
Persistent throat complaints
Throat swab positive for Aspergillus fumigatus
Antifungal therapy; no clinical improvement
2019
Severe spinal pain; impaired ambulation; episodic dyspnea
Considered fibromyalgia, SLE, and ankylosing spondylitis
Immunosuppressive and antimalarial therapy was proposed but declined during breastfeeding
2019
Hair loss, nasal ulcers, electrolyte abnormalities
Laboratory evaluation
Magnesium and potassium supplementation; symptomatic relief of palpitations only
July 19
Identification of chronic tonsillitis as a focal infection
Targeted ENT reassessment
Tonsillectomy performed
Post-2019–2025
Gradual resolution of all systemic symptoms
Long-term follow-up
Complete and sustained recovery without recurrence
Summary of ENT examinations
Between 2009 and 2018, the patient attended 10 ENT consultations, and an additional eight during 2018-2019, averaging 1.8 visits per year. The primary reason was persistent tonsillar stones. Some ENT specialists removed them, while others ignored them or prescribed antibiotics, which proved ineffective. Several ENT physicians attributed her symptoms to reflux and recommended inhaled fusafungine (Bioparox), Cataflam, Ulcogan, alkaline gargling, chamomile tea, or lifestyle modifications. One of these physicians was the first to identify a tonsillar focal infection in 2011, when purulent material could be expressed from the tonsils, but by that time, she advised treatment for reflux.
Suspicion of Lyme disease
Repeated IgM-positive ELISA tests for Borrelia prompted the patient to visit the Center for Tick-borne Diseases in Budapest. Based on our laboratory results, we excluded both active and long-standing past Lyme disease. Drawing on our experience with hundreds of similar cases, we initiated a targeted ENT evaluation in Hungary and concluded that her decade-long symptoms originated from chronic tonsillitis. Ultimately, a tonsillectomy was performed in July 2019. Just before the operation, a rheumatologist evaluated the patient and agreed on the need for tonsillectomy but expressed doubt that it would improve systemic symptoms. Nevertheless, the patient experienced gradual and complete recovery and remains symptom-free to date (end of 2025).
Laboratory findings
Laboratory data were available for 2018-2021 but were incomplete. Most routine parameters, including serum iron, ferritin, C-reactive protein (CRP), thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), rheumatoid factor (RF), liver and kidney function tests, blood counts, immunoglobulins, hepatitis serologies, HLA-B27, and multiple autoantibodies, remained within normal limits.
Some notable abnormalities included a mildly elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) (on four occasions; 10 mm/h preoperatively; 7 mm/h one year postoperatively), low transferrin saturation, mild hypokalemia, high vitamin B12, antinucleolar antibody (ANA) initially positive (homogeneous, later granular), then negative by 2021 post-tonsillectomy. Leukocytosis occurred once but was otherwise normal. Lyme serology included inconsistent ELISA results (one IgM equivocal, two IgM-positive), while IgG was always negative. Overall, laboratory tests did not indicate sustained systemic inflammation, aside from minor and intermittent deviations. A detailed account of pathological laboratory results is shown in Table 2.
Table 2. Pathological laboratory results.
ESR: erythrocyte sedimentation rate; ANA: antinucleolar antibody; WBC: white blood cell count
Laboratory test
Result
Reference range
ESR
28 mm/h
5-20 mm/h
Transferrin saturation
14.1%
20-45%
Serum potassium
3.28 mmol/l
3.5-5 mmol/l
ANA
1:80-1:160
Negative
Vitamin B12
1018 pg/ml
197-771 pg/ml
WBC
10.8 G/L
4.0-10.0 G/L
Discussion
This report emphasizes the clinical concepts outlined in our previously published article [11]. The main point is that there is no consensus on the diagnosis and management of chronic tonsillitis, either in routine clinical practice or in published guidelines, which are often contradictory and lack strong evidence [2]. The literature commonly distinguishes pus, detritus, keratin cysts, and tonsilloliths, implying that each requires different management. Except for pus, the other forms are generally considered benign [1]. The findings in this case suggest that these manifestations may be different expressions of the same biological process, each containing a significant bacterial load that could contribute to systemic symptoms, even when local inflammatory signs are absent. These observations highlight the importance of distinguishing relapsing acute bacterial tonsillitis from chronic tonsillitis to enhance diagnostic accuracy and efficiency (see Appendices). Guidelines should be revised to clearly reflect these distinctions if further research confirms these findings.
Several physicians linked the sore throat to gastroesophageal reflux and recommended treatments including Bioparox spray, Cataflam, Ulcogan, gargling with baking soda and chamomile tea, and following a reflux diet. Diagnostic uncertainty is highlighted by the identification of a tonsillar focal infection in 2011, when a physician noted purulent material from the tonsils, even though the same otolaryngologist, years later, continued to view reflux as the primary cause. This case demonstrates that failing to perform manual tonsillar compression can allow chronic tonsillitis to go undetected for years, resulting in unnecessary diagnostic procedures, misattribution of symptoms, and prolonged morbidity, despite the presence of an infection that could be cured surgically. Clinicians should clearly explain the serious risks of focal infections to patients to encourage consideration of tonsillectomy.
Observations from a specialized outpatient service dedicated to tick-borne diseases, with several decades of clinical experience, indicate that many patients referred with similar symptoms actually may have focal infections that are detectable by tonsillar compression and dental examination. It is frequently observed that such patterns are not recognized by clinicians and that patients may be referred for Lyme disease testing due to nonspecific systemic symptoms. An increase in testing may elevate the likelihood of false-positive results, reinforcing misconceptions regarding Lyme disease. Nevertheless, Lyme disease presents characteristic clinical features that can generally be distinguished from the systemic manifestations of focal infections [12].
Although no causal associations can be derived from this single case study, the fact that the patient’s symptoms worsened dramatically after a neck massage, possibly dislodging microbes from the tonsils into the bloodstream, and that her symptoms improved rapidly after tonsillectomy, may support a causal relationship. Nevertheless, further studies are required to determine whether this association is confirmed.
Conclusions
Chronic tonsillitis, tonsillar stones, tonsillar debris, and detritus represent forms of focal infection capable of causing systemic complications. Chronic tonsillitis differs fundamentally from recurrent acute tonsillitis: while the latter responds to antibiotic treatment, the chronic form requires surgical removal of the tonsils. Failure to distinguish between these two entities can have serious consequences. This report highlights the underrecognition of oral focal infections in clinical practice and raises important questions about why oral abscesses can remain asymptomatic for years and what triggers their acute systemic manifestations. Given the large number of similar cases observed at the Center for Tick-borne Diseases, these questions warrant further investigation through systematic clinical and microbiological studies with more robust methodological support than single-case analyses.
Acknowledgments
The author gratefully thanks the patient for collecting and providing her medical records, as well as numerous laboratory and imaging results. The patient provided written informed consent for the use of these data.
Appendices
Table 3. Comparison between recurrent acute bacterial and chronic tonsillitis.
This table highlights the fundamental clinical differences between recurrent acute bacterial and chronic tonsillitis, demonstrating that they are distinct conditions and should not be conflated in diagnostic or surgical decision-making [1,3,11]
Feature
Acute bacterial tonsillitis
Chronic tonsillitis
Throat pain
Severe throat pain
No sore throat unless a large tonsillolith causes pressure
Fever
High fever
No fever or low-grade fever only
Tonsillar appearance
Markedly inflamed tonsils
No erythema or acute swelling
Exudate
Abundant purulent exudate
Purulent material detectable only by tonsillar compression
Laboratory markers
Elevated inflammatory markers
No laboratory abnormalities
Response to antibiotics
Responds to antibiotics
Never or temporarily responds to antibiotics
Curative treatment
Antibiotic
Tonsillectomy
Disclosures
Human subjects: Informed consent for treatment and open access publication was obtained or waived by all participants in this study.
Conflicts of interest: In compliance with the ICMJE uniform disclosure form, all authors declare the following:
Payment/services info: All authors have declared that no financial support was received from any organization for the submitted work.
Financial relationships: All authors have declared that they have no financial relationships at present or within the previous three years with any organizations that might have an interest in the submitted work.
Other relationships: All authors have declared that there are no other relationships or activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work.
Author Contributions
Concept and design: András Lakos
Acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data: András Lakos
Drafting of the manuscript: András Lakos
Critical review of the manuscript for important intellectual content: András Lakos
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