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We have selected the following expert medical opinion based on its clarity, reliability and accuracy. Credits: Sourced from the website Patient UK, authored by Dr Jan Sambrook and Dr Helen Huins (see below). Please refer to your own medical practitioner for a final perspective, assessment or evaluation.
Laryngitis is an inflammation of your voice box (larynx), which causes you to have a hoarse voice. It is most commonly due to an infection, usually a virus.
Your larynx is sometimes described as your 'voice box'. It is made of two bands of muscles which stretch across the top of your windpipe (trachea). The movements and vibrations of those muscles, called the vocal cords, allow you to talk. If your voice box becomes swollen or inflamed, usually due to a viral infection. you can't talk properly anymore. Your voice becomes croaky or squeaky, and you cannot talk as loudly as usual.
You may feel sore over the front of your neck and become hoarse shortly afterwards. Your voice usually sounds different to normal. It may come out as a croak or a squeak, be husky, or just sound a bit different. The voice sometimes goes and you may only be able to whisper. Some people are alarmed by this. However, it is only temporary whilst the vocal cords are inflamed during the infection. You may also have a mild high temperature (fever) and a cough. Sometimes laryngitis is part of a more widespread infection. For example, you may also have a sore throat (pharyngitis), tonsillitis, a cold or a flu-like illness.
In these situations, you may also have other symptoms such as:
A typical viral laryngitis gets worse over 2-3 days. It then eases and goes, usually within a week. However, you may have a croaky voice for a week or so even after the other symptoms have gone. This is because the inflammation of the vocal cords may take a while to settle after the virus has gone.
Breathing difficulty is an uncommon complication. This may occur if there is a lot of inflammation and swelling in the voice box (larynx), which causes the windpipe (trachea) to narrow. This is rare in adults but sometimes happens in young children with smaller, narrower windpipes. See a doctor urgently if you have any difficulty in breathing with laryngitis.
The voice box (larynx) joins the back of the throat to the windpipe (trachea). The vocal cords are part of the larynx and are needed for speech. Laryngitis means inflammation of the larynx. It is most often due to infection with a germ. The most common germ causing laryngitis is a virus (viral laryngitis). Other causes are much less common.
As well as being caused by a virus, laryngitis can be caused by other germs, such as bacteria. Laryngitis may also be caused by a long period of screaming, yelling or singing very loudly. This causes your vocal cords to bang together which can make them inflamed.
If laryngitis doesn't settle after three weeks, it is called chronic laryngitis.
Causes for this include:
A change in your voice which lasts for more than three weeks always needs checking out by your doctor.
Normally no tests are needed and the diagnosis can be made from your symptoms and from examining you. However, you will need further tests if your hoarse voice lasts for more than three weeks.
See a doctor if any of the following develop:
If the hoarseness in your voice does not settle in three weeks, you should always see your doctor.
You will be referred to a specialist who can look down past your throat with a special instrument called a laryngoscope. This is so they can look directly at the voice box (larynx) to find the cause of the laryngitis. Once the cause has been found, treatment can be advised. For example, if laryngitis is due to voice overuse, you may be referred to a speech therapist for exercises for your larynx. Or if it is due to acid reflux, you may need treatment for that.
Laryngoscopy also checks your hoarseness is not caused by anything more serious.
Other less common causes for a hoarse voice are:
If possible, rest your voice when you have laryngitis. If you overuse your voice when the vocal cords are inflamed, it may make the inflammation worse. It is unlikely to do any permanent damage but it may take longer for your normal voice to return. Resting the voice means not shouting, singing or talking for long periods. Quiet conversation is usually fine. A sighing soft speech is best rather than whispering until the laryngitis has gone. This is because whispering makes your voice box (larynx) work harder than soft sighing speech. Once you can hum comfortably, you can probably start talking normally again.
If you are a performer such as a singer, it can be a difficult decision as to when to start singing again. Singing too early, when symptoms are easing, may prolong the hoarse voice longer than if you rest it fully until symptoms have completely gone. There is no easy answer as to the earliest it is safe to sing without doing any more harm. A professional singer may wish to consult a speech therapist if a crucial decision is to be made about an important singing engagement.
Usually not. Laryngitis is usually caused by a virus. Antibiotics do not kill viruses; they only kill bacteria. Your immune system usually clears viral infections quickly. A more severe laryngitis is sometimes due to bacteria.
An antibiotic may be advised if:
Dr Jan Sambrook (Author)
GP, Medical Author
MBChB, MRCGP
Dr Jan Sambrook qualified from the University of Sheffield in 1992. She trained as a GP in Barnsley, and has worked for most of her career as a GP around Huddersfield, West Yorkshire. She has an interest in maternal and child health, breastfeeding and nutrition.
Dr Helen Huins (Reviewer)
MB BS Lond, DCH, DRCOG, MRCGP, JCPTGP, DFFP
Helen qualified at Guy’s Hospital in 1989 and left London in 1990 to settle in the countryside. She works as a GP partner in a rural dispensing practice and is passionate about family medicine and continuity of care with interests in sport and nutrition. Helen has been a member of the EMIS authoring team since 1995.
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