Abraham Tonsil Knife — Pillar-Sparing Pattern
The Abraham tonsil knife — designed by London surgeon Phineas Abraham in the early twentieth century — has a guarded blade tip that prevents inadvertent cutting of the anterior or posterior tonsillar pillar during cold-knife tonsillectomy. The guard sits 2 mm proximal to the blade edge; if the operator engages the pillar inadvertently the guard contacts the pillar before the blade does, alerting the operator to redirect.
Pillar preservation and post-op voice
Damage to the tonsillar pillars during tonsillectomy contributes to the rare but real complication of velopharyngeal insufficiency and the subtle voice changes some patients report after tonsillectomy. The Abraham guard reduces the risk of pillar injury, particularly in trainee hands where the operator is still learning the capsular-plane technique.
The British pillar-sparing tradition
British ENT teaching has historically emphasised pillar preservation over speed in tonsillectomy, and the Abraham knife is the instrument expression of that teaching philosophy. The German and American traditions favoured speed (Hartmann tonsillectome guillotine) over pillar protection. The Abraham is the right knife for the trainee learning cold dissection in the British school.





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