Definition
An infection — usually viral — affecting the nose, sinuses, throat, and surrounding airways above the lungs. Common examples include the common cold, sore throat, and sinusitis. In aviation medicine, it is significant because the resulting congestion and inflammation can block the small passages that allow the ears and sinuses to equalize pressure with the surrounding atmosphere.
Plain English
A cold or similar illness affecting your nose, throat, or sinuses. Even a mild one can swell the small tubes that let your ears and sinuses adjust to changing cabin pressure.
Context Anchor
Seen in aeromedical discussions about middle ear and sinus problems, especially when deciding whether congestion makes flying unsafe.
Derivation
From Latin respirare — to breathe. The 'upper' respiratory tract refers to the airways above the voice box: nose, sinuses, and throat. Knowing this helps a pilot picture exactly which passages are swollen and why pressure changes become a problem.
Why Pilots Care
It can block the passages needed to equalize pressure in the ears and sinuses during climbs and descents, leading to pain or injury.
Grounding Statement
Picture descending with a bad cold: the outside pressure rises, but your blocked ears or sinuses may not be able to adjust smoothly.
Intuition Check
Do not treat an upper respiratory infection as only a comfort issue. Even a mild head cold can become a flight problem if it blocks the ears or sinuses from adjusting to pressure changes.
Example Sentence 1
The pilot canceled the flight after recognizing that an upper respiratory infection would likely cause an ear block during descent.
Example Sentence 2
During the flight physical the examiner asked whether the applicant had any current upper respiratory infection.