Shrink Enlarged Tonsils Without Surgery
Enlarged tonsils can block the airway, disrupt sleep, and cause chronic snoring - in both kids and adults. TonsilLase uses the Fotona laser to reduce tonsil tissue directly, so patients may be able to avoid surgery entirely.
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Tonsil surgery is one of the most commonly performed procedures in children - and the recovery is not easy. General anesthesia, a hospital setting, a painful two-week recovery, and real surgical risk. Many parents are told their child needs a tonsillectomy and they simply accept it, because until recently there was not much else to offer.
TonsilLase changes that. Using the Fotona laser, Dr. Larbi can apply controlled light energy directly to the tonsil tissue to gradually shrink it - reducing obstruction, improving airflow, and in many cases eliminating the snoring or breathing difficulties that made surgery seem necessary in the first place.
We have used TonsilLase in children with significantly inflamed, enlarged tonsils and seen results after a single treatment. For the right patient, it can be a meaningful alternative to going under the knife.
Both use the Fotona Er:YAG laser. But they target different tissue, treat different problems, and serve different patients. Understanding the distinction matters before deciding which treatment - or which combination - is right for you.
NightLase uses the Fotona laser to tighten the soft tissue of the soft palate - the floppy tissue at the back of the roof of the mouth that relaxes during sleep and vibrates, causing snoring. The laser stimulates collagen remodeling in the palate and surrounding throat tissue, reducing that vibration and helping keep the airway more open during sleep.
NightLase is for patients whose snoring comes from soft palate laxity. It does not shrink the tonsils.
TonsilLase uses the same Fotona laser, calibrated differently, applied directly to the tonsil tissue itself. The goal is to shrink enlarged or inflamed tonsils that are physically blocking the airway - without cutting them out. Results can be significant, and in some cases, a single treatment produces a noticeable reduction in tonsil size and snoring.
TonsilLase is for patients whose airway problem is the tonsils themselves, not the soft palate.
One of our hygienists had her child treated with TonsilLase. Her daughter's tonsils were very inflamed. After a single session, the snoring stopped.
A gentler path for a problem that has traditionally required surgery.
No cutting, no sutures, no general anesthesia, and no hospital stay. TonsilLase is performed in-office using the Fotona laser.
By shrinking tonsil tissue, TonsilLase creates more room at the back of the throat for air to move through during sleep and breathing.
TonsilLase can be used in children with enlarged tonsils who may otherwise be candidates for a tonsillectomy - with a much gentler experience and no surgical recovery.
Mild throat soreness for a day or two is typical. Most patients return to normal activity the same day - nothing like the two-week recovery of traditional tonsil surgery.
The tonsils sit at the back of the throat, one on each side of the airway. They are part of the immune system and serve a real purpose - particularly in early childhood when the body is developing its defenses against infections.
But tonsils can become chronically enlarged, sometimes due to repeated infections, sometimes as a developmental tendency in children whose tonsil tissue grows disproportionately large relative to the airway. When this happens, the tonsils physically reduce the diameter of the space air needs to pass through.
During sleep, when the muscles of the throat relax, enlarged tonsils can cause the airway to partially collapse - producing snoring, restless sleep, mouth breathing, and in more significant cases, obstructive sleep apnea. In children, this pattern of disrupted sleep has cascading effects: fatigue, behavioral difficulties, difficulty concentrating, and sometimes developmental delays that are frequently misread as ADHD.
In children, enlarged tonsils are the single most common structural cause of obstructive sleep-disordered breathing. Addressing them can have a profound effect on sleep quality, behavior, and overall development.
TonsilLase uses the Fotona Er:YAG laser - the same platform used for NightLase and laser cavity preparation at The Dentist Lounge - calibrated specifically for tonsil tissue treatment.
The laser energy is directed at the tonsil tissue, where it creates a controlled thermal effect just below the surface. This heat stimulus triggers a biological remodeling response: the tissue gradually tightens and contracts, and tonsil volume reduces over the course of treatment. The effect is progressive rather than immediate - the tonsils respond over the weeks following each session.
Importantly, the laser does not cut the tonsils out. There is no open wound, no bleeding, and no sutures. The tonsils remain in place; they simply become smaller and less obstructive. For patients with chronically inflamed tonsil tissue, the treatment also helps reduce that inflammation directly.
Because the mechanism is thermal remodeling rather than surgical removal, the body does not experience the same recovery demand. The throat may be mildly tender for a day or two - comparable to a mild sore throat - and then patients return to normal.
Dr. Larbi has treated children as young as early school age with TonsilLase, with results that in some cases have been noticeable after a single session.
A careful evaluation determines whether this approach is appropriate for you or your child.
TonsilLase is most effective when enlarged or inflamed tonsil tissue is a clear contributor to airway restriction, snoring, or sleep-disordered breathing. It is appropriate for both adults and children, though the evaluation and treatment planning process differs based on age, tonsil size, symptom severity, and overall airway anatomy.
An evaluation at The Dentist Lounge will include an airway assessment to determine whether TonsilLase is the right approach, whether it should be combined with other airway treatments, or whether referral to an ENT or sleep specialist is the more appropriate next step. Not every patient is a candidate, and we will always be direct about that.
Patients with recurrent tonsil infections, severely obstructive tonsils graded at the highest levels, or signs of significant obstructive sleep apnea may ultimately need a surgical intervention. We would rather identify that clearly early on than continue a conservative approach that cannot adequately address the problem.
Three of the most common situations we see.
Tonsil surgery is still the most common surgical procedure performed on children in the United States. But it is also an operation - with real recovery demands, real risk, and a very unpleasant two weeks for a child who is already struggling.
For families in Santa Monica and the surrounding Westside who have been told surgery is the next step, TonsilLase offers a legitimate conservative option worth evaluating first. In appropriate candidates, a course of laser treatment can reduce tonsil size enough to meaningfully improve breathing and sleep - and in some cases, avoid surgery entirely.
Many adults who snore have been through oral appliances, lifestyle changes, or NightLase therapy with partial improvement. When an airway evaluation reveals that enlarged tonsils are narrowing the oropharynx, TonsilLase can address what the other treatments could not.
It is also relevant for adults who had enlarged tonsils as children and were never treated, or whose tonsils have gradually enlarged or re-inflamed over time. Tonsil tissue does not stop being relevant after childhood - and treating it non-surgically in adulthood is a genuinely available option.
At The Dentist Lounge, TonsilLase is often one part of a broader airway care plan that may also include NightLase for soft palate tone, myofunctional therapy to address tongue posture and oral muscle function, or structural interventions like palatal expansion. When multiple factors are contributing to airway restriction, addressing each one together produces better outcomes than treating them in isolation.
If you are already working with us on sleep-disordered breathing or airway-focused care, an assessment for TonsilLase is a natural part of the process.
One platform. Multiple airway treatments. Precisely calibrated for each.
The Fotona Er:YAG laser is the foundation of several of the airway treatments offered at The Dentist Lounge - NightLase for soft palate snoring therapy, TonsilLase for tonsil reduction, and Er:YAG cavity preparation for laser fillings. What distinguishes each treatment is how the laser is calibrated: the wavelength, pulse duration, energy density, and depth of tissue penetration are adjusted specifically for the target tissue and the clinical goal.
For TonsilLase, Dr. Larbi calibrates the parameters specifically for tonsil tissue at each session, adjusting based on tissue response and treatment progress. This is not a protocol applied the same way to every patient - it is a clinical judgment informed by how an individual's tissue is responding over the course of treatment.
Fotona is a globally recognized medical laser manufacturer with FDA-cleared systems used in dental and medical practices across the world. The Er:YAG wavelength used for TonsilLase has a well-established safety profile for soft tissue treatment when applied by a trained clinician.
Why airway-focused dentistry looks beyond the mouth.
At The Dentist Lounge, we approach the airway as part of the whole-body picture. The way a person breathes - whether through the nose or mouth, whether the airway is open or partially obstructed during sleep - has downstream effects that reach far beyond snoring or restless nights.
In children, the consequences of chronically obstructed breathing are especially significant. A child whose sleep is fragmented by enlarged tonsils is not recovering, consolidating memory, releasing growth hormone, or building the neurological foundations that learning and development depend on. The behavioral effects - irritability, impulsivity, poor concentration, hyperactivity - are regularly misread as ADHD or temperament issues when the underlying problem is that the child simply cannot breathe well during sleep.
In adults, sleep-disordered breathing linked to tonsil obstruction is associated with cardiovascular stress, elevated systemic inflammation, metabolic disruption, and diminished quality of life. Sleep is not passive time - it is when the body repairs, regulates, and restores. Anything that chronically interrupts it has real health consequences.
Treating enlarged tonsils conservatively with TonsilLase - when it is clinically appropriate - is not just about reducing snoring. It is about restoring the airway so the body can do what it is supposed to do every night.
Reduced tonsil obstruction supports more complete, uninterrupted sleep cycles - better for energy, mood, immune function, and long-term health in both children and adults.
Addressing tonsil obstruction in children can have meaningful effects on behavior, attention, and learning - outcomes that are difficult to achieve with behavioral or educational interventions alone when the root cause is insufficient sleep.
When the oropharyngeal airway is less obstructed, patients are better able to breathe nasally - which supports proper facial development in children, better sleep architecture, and improved nitric oxide production.
Chronically inflamed tonsil tissue is a source of systemic inflammatory load. Reducing that tissue volume may help lower the body's overall burden of chronic inflammation.
TonsilLase is most effective when paired with other airway care - myofunctional therapy, NightLase, or structural treatment - addressing multiple contributors to obstruction together.
For patients who want to understand the details before their first visit.
A tonsillectomy surgically removes the tonsils entirely - typically under general anesthesia in a hospital, with a painful recovery of one to two weeks, dietary restrictions, activity limitations, and the risks associated with any surgical procedure. For children, the experience is particularly difficult.
TonsilLase does not remove the tonsils. It uses controlled laser energy to reduce their size by stimulating tissue remodeling. The tonsils remain in place - they simply become smaller and less obstructive. There is no cutting, no wound site, no sutures, and no general anesthesia. Treatment is performed in-office at The Dentist Lounge, and most patients return to normal activity the same day.
For patients whose tonsils are causing airway problems but have not yet reached the threshold where surgical removal is medically necessary - or for families who want to explore every conservative option before surgery - TonsilLase offers a genuinely different path.
TonsilLase works through a progressive tissue remodeling process, so results typically develop over the weeks following each session rather than immediately. That said, in some cases - particularly when tonsils are acutely inflamed - the reduction in tissue size and associated improvement in breathing can be notable even after a single treatment.
Dr. Larbi assesses treatment response at each session and adjusts the plan based on how the tissue is responding. Patients who see improvement early may need fewer total sessions; those with more significantly enlarged tonsils may need more time and more visits to achieve the desired reduction.
The number of sessions varies based on tonsil size, degree of inflammation, airway anatomy, and how the individual patient's tissue responds to treatment. Most patients require a series of sessions spaced several weeks apart to allow the remodeling process to progress between visits.
There is no fixed protocol applied to every patient. Dr. Larbi determines the treatment plan based on evaluation and adjusts it as treatment progresses. The goal is the tissue reduction needed to meaningfully improve airway function - not a predetermined number of appointments.
The procedure itself is generally well-tolerated. A topical anesthetic may be applied to the throat before treatment. During the session, most patients experience mild warmth and, in some cases, a slight tingling sensation - not the discomfort associated with any kind of surgical procedure.
After treatment, the throat may feel mildly sore or tender for a day or two - similar to the early stages of a sore throat. This typically resolves quickly and is a normal tissue response. There is no prolonged painful recovery of the kind associated with tonsillectomy. Most patients do not need pain medication beyond over-the-counter options, if anything at all.
Yes - and often it is most effective as part of a broader airway care plan. At The Dentist Lounge, tonsil treatment is frequently coordinated alongside NightLase therapy for soft palate laxity, myofunctional therapy to address tongue posture and oral muscle function, and in some cases structural interventions like palatal expansion.
Airway obstruction is rarely caused by a single factor. When enlarged tonsils are one contributor alongside soft palate laxity, low tongue posture, or a narrow palatal arch, treating each factor produces better and more durable results than addressing them in isolation. Dr. Larbi will evaluate all relevant contributors to obstruction and recommend a coordinated plan where appropriate.
It may be, depending on the child's age, tonsil size, symptom profile, and overall airway anatomy. We evaluate each pediatric case carefully, including assessment of tonsil grade, nasal airway patency, and any behavioral or developmental symptoms that indicate the severity of the sleep disruption.
For children with appropriate anatomy and tonsil size, TonsilLase can be a meaningful first step before surgery. For children whose tonsils are severely obstructive or who show signs of significant obstructive sleep apnea, we will not delay referral for a surgical evaluation. The goal is the best outcome for the child - not the avoidance of referral at all costs.
Not every patient achieves sufficient reduction from laser treatment alone. If a course of TonsilLase produces limited improvement, or if a patient's symptoms indicate a level of obstruction that conservative treatment cannot adequately address, we will say so directly and facilitate a referral to an ENT specialist for further evaluation.
We consider it our responsibility to be honest about what we can and cannot address conservatively. If surgery is ultimately the right answer for a patient, we would rather identify that clearly and connect them with the right specialist than continue a treatment approach that is not producing the results they need.
No. TonsilLase uses laser energy to reduce tonsil tissue without removing the tonsils. Traditional tonsillectomy surgically removes them under general anesthesia. TonsilLase is performed in-office with no cutting, no sutures, and no general anesthesia required.
It can, when enlarged tonsils are a contributing factor to the snoring or nighttime breathing difficulty. We have seen meaningful results in children after TonsilLase treatment - including in cases where snoring stopped following a single session. A consultation and airway evaluation is the right starting point to determine whether your child is an appropriate candidate.
Individual TonsilLase sessions are typically completed within 30 to 45 minutes. Because there is no anesthesia recovery and no wound to manage, patients are generally able to return to normal activity the same day.
Not always. Patients with significant obstructive sleep apnea, recurrent tonsil infections, or symptoms that suggest a more serious medical condition often benefit from co-management with an ENT or sleep specialist. We see our role as complementary to medical evaluation - not as a replacement for it when it is clinically indicated.
TonsilLase is generally considered an elective procedure and is not typically covered by dental or medical insurance. We recommend calling your insurance provider directly to understand your specific plan's coverage. Our team can provide documentation of the procedure to support any out-of-pocket claims you choose to file.
We are located at 1304 15th St, Suite 209, Santa Monica, CA 90404 - easily accessible from West LA, Brentwood, Pacific Palisades, Mar Vista, Culver City, Venice, and surrounding Westside communities. You can reach us at (310) 395-1810 or book an appointment online.
Recovery is minimal. Results develop gradually as the tissue responds.
Most patients leave with mild throat tenderness - comparable to the very early stages of a sore throat. There is no open wound, no bleeding, and nothing to manage at home beyond staying comfortable.
Some mild soreness when swallowing is normal and expected. Staying hydrated, avoiding very hot or spicy foods, and resting the voice if it feels irritated all support a comfortable first 48 hours.
Most patients return to their routine the same day or the next morning. There are no dietary restrictions beyond the first couple of days and no activity limitations - nothing like the recovery from tonsil surgery.
TonsilLase works through progressive tissue remodeling. Improvement in breathing, snoring, or sleep quality typically becomes noticeable over the weeks following each session as the tonsil tissue responds and gradually reduces in volume.
Sessions are spaced several weeks apart to allow tissue response between visits. Dr. Larbi evaluates tonsil size and treatment progress at each appointment and adjusts the plan accordingly.
TonsilLase results are intended to be durable. Supporting those results with good nasal breathing habits, myofunctional health where relevant, and continued airway monitoring at your regular visits gives you the best long-term outcome.
If enlarged tonsils are affecting breathing, sleep, or comfort - or if you have been told surgery is the next step - schedule a consultation with Dr. Larbi at The Dentist Lounge in Santa Monica. We will evaluate the airway honestly and tell you whether TonsilLase is an appropriate option for your situation.
Schedule a ConsultationTonsilLase is often part of a broader airway care plan at The Dentist Lounge.
The Fotona laser treatment that tightens soft palate tissue to reduce snoring - distinct from TonsilLase but often used alongside it.
Airway and SleepOur full approach to sleep-disordered breathing, airway obstruction, and the dental treatments that support better nighttime health.
Airway SupportOral muscle retraining that supports nasal breathing, correct tongue posture, and better airway function - often paired with TonsilLase.
Children's AirwayHow breathing patterns, jaw development, and airway anatomy influence a child's growth, behavior, and long-term health.
Signs to Watch ForThe behavioral and physical signals that may indicate your child's airway is not functioning well during sleep.
Structural Airway CarePalatal expansion and jaw development treatments that address the structural contributors to airway restriction at the source.