Licorice gargle may help surgery patients
Posted on: Monday, 22 June 2009, 20:16 CDT
Surgery patients gargling with licorice solution were less likely than others to develop sore throat, doctors in India said
Sore throat is a common complication after general anesthesia. If coughing is also present, it can lead to further complications.
The study of 40 spinal surgery patients, published in Anesthesia & Analgesia, found 25 percent of those who used the licorice gargle five minutes prior to insertion of an air way tube to induce general anesthesia had a sore throat.
Among those who gargled with plain water only, 75 percent developed sore throat. Post-operative sore throat -- including pain on swallowing -- was also less severe in the licorice group.
Ten percent of the patients who used the licorice gargle were less likely to develop post-operative cough, while 30 percent of patients who gargled with water developed post-operative cough. There were no side effects reported for the licorice gargle.
Licorice, derived from the root of Glycyrrhiza glabra, has been used for many millennia as an alternative medicine for treatment of inflammation, allergies and gastric and duodenal ulcers,
study leader Dr. Anil Agarwal of Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences in Lucknow, India, said in a statement.
Source: United Press International
Related Articles
- Brit's sore throat calls land him in jail
- A Drug With Efficacy Superior to That of Remicade at Inducing Closure and Healing of Fistulas Would Earn a 30 Percent Patient Share in the Crohn's Disease Drug Market
- AstraZeneca's Recentin Plus FOLFOX4 to Earn 10 Percent Patient Share in the Treatment of Colorectal Cancer By 2016
- AstraZeneca's Zactima to Earn Almost Five Percent Patient Share in the Treatment of Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer By 2016
- Study: Kids' Sore Throats Misdiagnosed
- Antibiotics May Not Fix Sore Throat in Children
- Antibiotics given too often for sore throat-study
- Antibiotics Improperly Prescribed for Sore Throats
- Too Many Antibiotics Prescribed for Kids With Sore Throats
- Sore Throat in Adults - Does the Introduction of a Clinical Scoring System Improve the Management of These Patients in a Secondary Care Setting?
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds