• Inflamm. Res. · Oct 2012

    Review

    Environmental and non-infectious factors in the aetiology of pharyngitis (sore throat).

    • Bertold Renner, Christian A Mueller, and Adrian Shephard.
    • Department of Experimental and Clinical Pharmacology, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Krankenhausstr. 9, 91054 Erlangen, Germany. bertold.renner@pharmakologie.uni-erlangen.de
    • Inflamm. Res. 2012 Oct 1; 61 (10): 1041-52.

    ObjectivesThe aim of this review is to examine the causes, pathophysiology and experimental models of non-infectious pharyngitis (sore throat).IntroductionThe causes of sore throat can be infectious (viruses, bacteria, and fungi) or non-infectious, although the relative proportion of each is not well documented.MethodsA PubMed database search was performed for studies of non-infectious sore throat.Results And ConclusionsNon-infectious causes of sore throat include: physico-chemical factors, such as smoking, snoring, shouting, tracheal intubation, medications, or concomitant illness; and environmental factors including indoor and outdoor air pollutants, temperature and humidity, and hazardous or occupational irritants. The pathophysiology underlying non-infectious sore throat is largely uncharacterised, although neurogenic inflammation looks to be a promising candidate. It is likely that there will be individual disposition factors or the coincidence of more than one irritant with possible--up to now unknown--interactions between them. Therefore, experimental models with defined conditions and objective endpoints are needed. A new model using cold dry air to directly induce pharyngeal irritation in humans, with pharyngeal lavage to measure biomarkers, may provide a useful tool for the study of mechanisms and treatment of non-infectious sore throat.

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