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Sore
throat
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What Causes a Sore Throat?
Sore throat is a symptom of many medical disorders. Infections
cause the majority of sore throats and are contagious. Infections
are caused either by viruses such as the flu, the common cold,
mononucleosis, or by bacteria such as strep, mycoplasma, or
hemophilus.
While bacteria respond to antibiotic treatment, viruses do
not.
Viruses: Most viral sore throats accompany flu or colds
along with a stuffy, runny nose, sneezing, and generalized
aches and pains. These viruses are highly contagious and spread
quickly, especially in winter. The body builds antibodies
that destroy the virus, a process that takes about a week.
Sore throats accompany other viral infections such as measles,
chicken pox, whooping cough, and croup. Canker sores and fever
blisters in the throat also can be very painful.
One viral infection takes much longer than a week to be cured:
infectious mononucleosis, or "mono." This virus
lodges in the lymph system, causing massive enlargement of
the tonsils, with white patches on their surface and swollen
glands in the neck, armpits, and groin. It creates a severely
sore throat and, sometimes, serious breathing difficulties.
It can affect the liver, leading to jaundice— yellow skin
and eyes. It also causes extreme fatigue that can last six
weeks or more.
"Mono," a severe illness in teenagers but less severe
in children, can he transmitted by saliva. So it has been
nicknamed the "kissing disease," but it can also
be transmitted from mouth-to-hand to hand-to-mouth or by sharing
of towels and eating utensils.
Bacteria: Strep throat is an infection caused by a
particular strain of streptococcus bacteria. This infection
can also damage the heart valves (rheumatic fever) and kidneys
(nephritis), cause scarlet fever, tonsillitis, pneumonia,
sinusitis, and ear infections.
Because of these possible complications, a strep throat should
be treated with an antibiotic. Strep is not always easy to
detect by examination, and a throat culture may be needed.
These tests, when positive, persuade the physician to prescribe
antibiotics. However, strep tests might not detect other bacteria
that also can cause severe sore throats that deserve antibiotic
treatment. For example, severe and chronic cases of tonsillitis
or tonsillar abscess may be culture negative. Similarly, negative
cultures are seen with diphtheria, and infections from oral
sexual contacts will escape detection by strep culture tests.
Tonsillitis is an infection of the lumpy tissues on each side
of the back of the throat. In the first two to three years
of childhood, these tissues "catch" infections,
sampling the child's environment to help develop his immunities
(antibodies). Healthy tonsils do not remain infected. Frequent
sore throats from tonsillitis suggest the infection is not
fully eliminated between episodes. A medical study has shown
that children who suffer from frequent episodes of tonsillitis
(such as three- to four- times each year for several years)
were healthier after their tonsils were surgically removed.
Infections in the nose and sinuses also can cause sore throats,
because mucus from the nose drains down into the throat and
carries the infection with it.
The most dangerous throat infection is epiglottitis, caused
by bacteria that infect a portion of the larynx (voice box)
and cause swelling that closes the airway. This infection
is an emergency condition that requires prompt medical attention.
Suspect it when swallowing is extremely painful (causing drooling),
when speech is muffled, and when breathing becomes difficult.
A strep test may miss this infection.
Allergy: The same pollens and molds that irritate the
nose when they are inhaled also may irritate the throat. Cat
and dog danders and house dust are common causes of sore throats
for people with allergies to them.
Irritation: During the cold winter months, dry heat may
create a recurring, mild sore throat with a parched feeling,
especially in the mornings. This often responds to humidification
of bedroom air and increased liquid intake. Patients with
a chronic stuffy nose, causing mouth breathing, also suffer
with a dry throat. They need examination and treatment of
the nose.
Pollutants and chemicals in the air can irritate the nose
and throat, but the most common air pollutant is tobacco smoke.
Other irritants include smokeless tobacco, alcoholic beverages,
and spicy foods.
A person who strains his or her voice (yelling at a sports
event, for example) gets a sore throat not only from muscle
strain but also from the rough treatment of his or her throat
membranes.
Reflux: An occasional cause of morning sore throat
is regurgitation of stomach acids up into the back of the
throat. To avoid reflux, tilt your bedframe so that the head
is elevated four- to six-inches higher than the foot of the
bed. You might find antacids helpful. You should also avoid
eating within three hours of bedtime, and eliminate caffeine
and alcohol. If these tips fail, see your doctor.
Tumors: Tumors of the throat, tongue, and larynx (voice
box) are usually (but not always) associated with long-time
use of tobacco and alcohol. Sore throat and difficulty swallowing,
sometimes with pain radiating to the ear, may be symptoms
of such a tumor. More often the sore throat is so mild or
so chronic that it is hardly noticed. Other important symptoms
include hoarseness, a lump in the neck, unexplained weight
loss, and/or spitting up blood in the saliva or phlegm.
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