Abstract

PurposeIn 2013, the FDA placed a black box warning on the usage of opioid pain medications in the post-operative setting after pediatric adenotonsillectomy. Since then, alternative pain management regimens have been employed. Some have advocated for post-operative oral steroids, in part due to the effectiveness of intraoperative intravenous steroids in reducing post-operative pain and nausea. The evidence regarding the efficacy and safety of post-operative oral steroids is not as clear. The purpose of this study was to examine whether post-tonsillectomy hemorrhage rates in pediatric patients were affected by post-operative oral steroid usage. Materials and methodsCase-control retrospective chart review using a deidentified data set of patients undergoing tonsillectomy with or without adenoidectomy at a single academic medical center between June 2012 and November 2015. ResultsA total of 1416 patients were included in the study, with 704 in the no post-operative oral steroids group and 712 in the group who did receive post-operative oral steroids. The rate of post-tonsillectomy hemorrhage in the post-operative oral steroid group was 3.1 % compared to 1.8 % in the group who did not receive post-operative oral steroids, however, this was not a statistically significant difference (P = .132). ConclusionsOur study suggests that post-operative oral steroids are safe and do not increase the risk of post-operative hemorrhage after pediatric tonsillectomy.

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