Erysipelatous pharyngitis is to be treated by the administration, by enema if necessary, of large doses of quinia, tincture of the chloride of iron, brandy, and diffusible stimulants. Alimentation is to be kept up by mouth or rectum, as may be necessary, with as much food as can be given containing the most nutrition in the smallest bulk possible. Locally, a strong solution of silver nitrate (sixty grains to the ounce) should be so applied as to cover a margin of unaffected structures. Sedative inhalations are of service. Extension to the larynx demands scarification or tracheotomy.

When the diagnosis of common membranous sore throat can be made out with certainty, there is nothing calling for special treatment, but the treatment pursued in ordinary sore throat may be generally followed with advantage. When fetor exists, as during the detachment of patches of exudation, antiseptic and detergent sprays may be employed. Solutions of borax, boric acid, carbolic acid, potassium chlorate, potassium permanganate, etc. are appropriate. In some individuals, especially strumous and tuberculous subjects, there is a constitutional proclivity to chronicity or to the recurrence of the peculiar manifestations. More active measures will be required in these cases. Locally, frequent application of the dilute acids (i.e. every day or two) affords the most satisfactory results. Internally, iron and cinchona preparations should be administered. Opium in small doses has a special application—not as a narcotic, but as a gentle stimulant or nervous tonic. Nux vomica or arsenic may be employed for a similar purpose. The diet should be highly nutritious and easily assimilable. Unnecessary exposure should be avoided, and supporting measures generally, hygienic, as well as medicinal, should be persisted in. Membranous pharyngitis sometimes exhibits a tendency to phagedæna. The treatment for gangrenous sore throat is then indicated. It may invite an attack of diphtheria or the diagnosis may be in doubt. In that case the prudent course is to treat it as diphtheria, but to avoid the recommendation for diphtheria of some indifferent remedy, during the exhibition of which a case of membranous sore throat has recovered. When extension to the larynx occurs threatening suffocation, tracheotomy to avert death should be performed, as in croup or diphtheria.

The sore throats of the exanthemata, of typhoid fever, etc., are to be treated on the general principles applicable to catarrhal or phlegmonous pharyngitis. Oedema or tumefaction, as in malignant scarlatina, of a sufficient extent to obstruct respiration, is to be relieved by scarification, and when this is inefficient resort must be had to tracheotomy. The sore throats caused by drugs are to be treated first by removal of the cause, and afterward according to the special indications.

Tuberculous Pharyngitis.

DEFINITION.—An acute ulcerative pharyngitis due to infiltration with miliary and granular tubercle and the consequent destructive metamorphosis.

SYNONYMS.—Acute tuberculous sore throat, Acute tuberculous pharyngitis, Tuberculosis of the pharynx, Phthisis of the pharynx.

HISTORY.—Only of late years has tuberculosis of the pharynx been distinctly recognized as a tuberculous disease. The tubercular sore throat or pharyngitis described by Green of New York, and other authors following him, is an affection of entirely different character, and not tuberculosis at all. The chronic tuberculous sore throat of advanced tuberculosis is likewise a different affection clinically, though of the same histological character.

To the late Isambert2 of Paris belongs the credit of definitively recognizing the specificity of acute tuberculous sore throat or pharyngitis, and to him likewise the credit of indicating its differentiation from syphilitic sore throat, with which it had long been confounded. To B. Fraenkel of Berlin3 is likewise due the credit of an accurate comprehension and elucidation of the clinical and histological pathology of this disease.

2 Annales des Maladies de l'Oreille, du Larynx, etc., vol. xi., 1875, p. 162; Conférences cliniques sur les Maladies du Larynx et des premières Voices, Paris, 1877, p. 219.

3 Berlin. klin. Woch., Nov., 1876; London Med. Record, Jan. 15, Feb. 15, 1877.