Research suggests that the available published evidence specifically examining manuka honey for sore throat relief is essentially absent from the studies provided, as the single linked study focuses on bradykinin-driven inflammation in pharyngitis and tests aspirin-based formulations rather than manuka honey. This in vitro and three-dimensional tissue model study did find that certain common over-the-counter sore throat products appeared to increase inflammatory markers rather than reduce them, which is an interesting contextual finding, but it does not speak directly to manuka honey's effects. A significant limitation of this sole study is that it was entirely funded by the manufacturer of the product it ultimately favored, and all authors were company employees, raising substantial concerns about potential bias. Overall, the evidence base provided here is insufficient to draw meaningful conclusions about manuka honey's role in sore throat relief, and readers interested in this topic would benefit from seeking out research that directly investigates honey-based interventions.
Citations from PubMed and preprint sources. Match score (0-100) reflects automated search ranking, not clinical appraisal.
| Title | Type | Year | Direction | Match |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A novel anti-inflammatory treatment for bradykinin-induced sore throat or pha... | Other | 2020 | — | 85 |