Diphtheria is an upper respiratory tract illness characterized by sore throat, low-grade fever, and an adherent membrane (a pseudomembrane) on the tonsil(s), pharynx, and/or nose. A milder form of diphtheria can be limited to the skin. It is caused by Corynebacterium diphtheriae, an aerobic Gram-positive bacterium.
Diphtheria is a highly contagious disease spread by direct physical contact or breathing the secretions of those infected. Diphtheria was once quite common, but has now largely been eradicated in developed nations. In the United States for instance, there have been fewer than 5 cases a year reported since 1980, as the DPT (Diphtheria-Tetanus-Pertussis) vaccine is given to all school children. Boosters of the vaccine are recommended for adults because the benefits of the vaccine decrease with age; they are particularly recommended for those travelling to areas where the disease has not been eradicated yet.
In addition to symptoms at the site of infection (sore throat), the patient may experience more generalized symptoms, such as listlessness, pallor, and fast heart rate. These symptoms are caused by the toxin released by the bacterium. Low blood pressure may develop in these patients. Longer-term effects of the diphtheria toxin include cardiomyopathy and peripheral neuropathy (sensory type)*.
The cutaneous form of diphtheria is often a secondary infection of a preexisting skin disease. Signs of cutaneous diphtheria infection develop an average of 7 days after the appearance of the primary skin disease.
Empirical treatment should generally be started in a patient in whom suspicion of diphtheria is high.
Antibiotics have not been demonstrated to affect healing of local infection in diphtheria patients treated with antitoxin. Antibiotics are used in patients or carriers to eradicate C. diphtheriae and prevent its transmission to others. The CDC recommends either:
Patients with allergies to penicillin G or erythromycin can use rifampin or clindamycin.
Such statistics show that constant vigilance must be maintained even on largely eradicated diseases, especially since many of these diseases show growing resistance to drugs that have been used to fight them for decades.
From the CDC guidelines:
The Schick test can be used to test susceptibility.
Diphtheria was once one of the most dreaded diseases, with frequent large-scale outbreaks. A diphtheria epidemic in the New England colonies between 1735 and 1740 was said to have killed as many as 80% of the children under 10 years of age in some towns. In the 1920s there were an estimated 100,000 to 200,000 cases of diphtheria per year in the United States, with 13,000 to 15,000 deaths. Children represented the large majority of cases and fatalities.
One of the first early effective treatments was discovered in the 1880s by U.S. physician Joseph O'Dwyer (1841-1898). O'Dwyer developed tubes that could be inserted into the throat to prevent victims from suffocating from the membrane sheath that grew and obstructed the airways. In the 1890s, the German physician Emil von Behring developed an antitoxin that, although it did not kill the bacteria, neutralized the toxic poisons that the bacteria released into the body. For this discovery and his development of a serum therapy for diphtheria, he won the first Nobel Prize in Medicine. (Americans William H. Park and Anna Wessels Williams also developed a diphtheria antitoxin in the 1890s.) The first successful vaccine for diphtheria was developed in 1923. However, effective vaccines were not developed until the discovery and development of sulfa drugs following World War II.
Diphtheria was also prevalent in the British royal family during the late 19th century. Famous cases included a daughter and granddaughter of Britain's Queen Victoria. Princess Alice of Hesse (second daughter of Queen Victoria) died of diphtheria after she contracted it from her children in December of 1878 while nursing them. One of Princess Alice's own daughters, Princess Marie, also died of diphtheria in November of 1878.
Sacagawea and Elisha Graves Otis also died from diphtheria.
Infectious diseases | Bacterial diseases
Дифтерия | Diphtherie | Difteria | Difterio | Difteria | دیفتری | Diphtérie | דיפתריה | Diftéria | Difteria | Difterie | ジフテリア | Difteri | Błonica | Difteria | Дифтерија | Kurkkumätä | Difteri | Bệnh bạch hầu | 白喉
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