Guest guest Posted July 9, 2004 Report Share Posted July 9, 2004 Aphthous Stomatitis are canker sores. Not tonsillitis. White marks on back of throat are tonsillitis. NOT THE SAME. Related in the fact that some children with will get both tonsillitis and the cankers... while others do not! As for " late " ... many of the children present with periodic fevers and at different times during their disorder will develop new symptoms... possibly lose other symptoms or have all of them. Varies. My son had NO cankers until 2 as well as no tonsil involvement until 18 months yet the extreme high fevers started at 6 months old and he cycled almost exactly every 21 days UNTIL we tried Prednisone. Some children get the cankers and they remain for weeks. While others may get them immediately prior or at onset of the fever and they disappear with the fever. varies greatly. God Bless Fran Fran A Bulone Mom to ph 5 yrs old Waxhaw, NC Owner & Moderator Group Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 9, 2004 Report Share Posted July 9, 2004 Aphthous Stomatitis are canker sores. Not tonsillitis. White marks on back of throat are tonsillitis. NOT THE SAME. Related in the fact that some children with will get both tonsillitis and the cankers... while others do not! As for " late " ... many of the children present with periodic fevers and at different times during their disorder will develop new symptoms... possibly lose other symptoms or have all of them. Varies. My son had NO cankers until 2 as well as no tonsil involvement until 18 months yet the extreme high fevers started at 6 months old and he cycled almost exactly every 21 days UNTIL we tried Prednisone. Some children get the cankers and they remain for weeks. While others may get them immediately prior or at onset of the fever and they disappear with the fever. varies greatly. God Bless Fran Fran A Bulone Mom to ph 5 yrs old Waxhaw, NC Owner & Moderator Group Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 9, 2004 Report Share Posted July 9, 2004 Hi, Tonsillitis with is usually at onset of fevers. It also disappears as soon as the fevers go. It is thought NOT to be of viral origin... as there is no infectious process going on... The belief is there IS and inflammatory process going on.... causing the tonsils to enlarge. Why the pus? No one knows. Same with the cankers.. many have been cultured... and nothing grows. So... I think the answer to your question is it is tonsillitis... but not viral or bacterial... it is actually called pharyngitis when documented for .... basically medical lingo... Help??? a little?? God Bless, Fran Fran A Bulone Mom to ph 5 yrs old Waxhaw, NC Owner & Moderator Group Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 9, 2004 Report Share Posted July 9, 2004 Hi, Tonsillitis with is usually at onset of fevers. It also disappears as soon as the fevers go. It is thought NOT to be of viral origin... as there is no infectious process going on... The belief is there IS and inflammatory process going on.... causing the tonsils to enlarge. Why the pus? No one knows. Same with the cankers.. many have been cultured... and nothing grows. So... I think the answer to your question is it is tonsillitis... but not viral or bacterial... it is actually called pharyngitis when documented for .... basically medical lingo... Help??? a little?? God Bless, Fran Fran A Bulone Mom to ph 5 yrs old Waxhaw, NC Owner & Moderator Group Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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