What Increases Your Risk
Close contact with an infected
person is the main risk factor for
tonsillitis. Droplets of disease-causing agents (pathogens) pass through the air when an infected
person breathes, coughs, or sneezes. You may then become infected after
breathing in these droplets. Infection can also occur if pathogens get on the
skin or on objects that come in contact with the mouth, nose, eyes, or other
mucous membranes.
Nasal obstruction causes you to breathe through
your mouth, which increases the risk of tonsillitis.
Although
there is no proof that exposure to cigarette smoke can cause tonsillitis,
children who live with a smoker have a higher incidence of tonsillectomy, which
is a surgical procedure to remove the tonsils.1