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Diphtheria

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An abscess may develop lateral to the tonsil during an infection, typically several days after the onset of tonsillitis. ... Document presentation format: – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Diphtheria


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Diphtheria
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  • Tonsillitis is inflammation of the tonsils
    most commonly caused by a viral or bacterial
    infection. Symptoms of tonsillitis include sore
    throat and fever.

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  • Under normal circumstances, as viruses and
    bacteria enter the body through the nose and
    mouth, they are filtered in the tonsils. Within
    the tonsils, white blood cells of the immune
    system mount an attack that helps destroy the
    viruses or bacteria by producing inflammatory
    cytokines like Phospholipase A2, which also lead
    to fever. The infection may also be present in
    the throat and surrounding areas, causing
    inflammation of the pharynx. This is the area in
    the back of the throat that lies between the
    voice box and the tonsils.

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Primary tonsillitis
  • The most common bacterial cause is Group A
    ß-hemolytic streptococcus (GABHS), which causes
    strep throat. Less common bacterial causes
    include Staphylococcus aureus (including
    methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus or
    MRSA ),

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Secondary tonsillitis(symptomatic)
  • The most common causes of tonsillitis are
    adenovirus, rhinovirus, influenza, coronavirus,
    and respiratory syncytial virus. It can also be
    caused by Epstein-Barr virus, herpes simplex
    virus, cytomegalovirus.

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Specific tonsillitis
  • Sometimes, tonsillitis is caused by an infection
    of spirochaeta and treponema, in this case called
    Vincent's angina or Plaut-Vincent angina.
  • Sometimes by fungi.
  • Sometimes - by Corynebacterium diphtheriae

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  • Acute disease from the group of respiratory
    infections which characterized by fibrinous
    inflammation of mucous membranes of oral cavity,
    nasopharynx, larynx with toxic lesion of
    cardiovascular and nervous systems

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Etiology
Corynebacterium diphtheriae (Leffler rod)
  • Grampositive, nonmotile
  • Dont forms spores and capsules
  • Coloured by Neisser in brown-yellow color
  • Ru, Leffler, Clauberg mediums - blood agar with
    tellurium salts
  • Cultural-biochemical types of C. diphtheriae -
    mitis, gravis, intermedius
  • Production of very strong exotoxin (gene tox )
  • Structure of exotocin - dermanecrotoxin,
    hemolysin, neuraminidase, hyaluronidase
  • Firm to low temperature, long save on a dry
    surfaces high responsive to heating and
    desinfection solutions

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Epidemiology
  • Source sick person or carrier (convalescent or
    health) of toxicogenic strains
  • Ways of transmission - airborne, contact -
    household (occasionally)
  • Sensibility is high, adults more often become
    sick (80 )
  • Case rate sporadic, outbreaks are possible
  • Immunodefence antitoxic, postvaccine
  • Seasonal character - autumn - winter

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Diphtheria cases reported to World Health
Organization between 1997 and 2007
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Pathogenesis
  • Penetration of the agent through entrance gate
    (mucous of upper respiratory tract, sometimes
    conjunctivas, skin)
  • Production of exotoxin
  • Local and systemic effects of the toxin
  • Dermonecrotoxin - necrosis of a surface
    epithelium, retardation of blood stream, rising
    of a permeability of vessels, their fragility,
    transuding of plasma in ambient tissues,
    formation of a fibrinous film, edema of tissues
    downstroke of pain sensitivity

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Pathogenesis
  • Neuraminidase - replacement of cytochrome,
    blockage of cellular respiration, destruction of
    a cell, violation of a function of organs and
    tissues (central and peripheric nervous system,
    cardiovascular system, kidneys)
  • Hyaluronidase - destruction of a stroma of a
    connecting tissue (rising of permeability of
    vessels, edema of tissues)
  • Hemolysin - hemorrhagic set of symptoms

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Classification
  • Localization - otopharynx, nose, larynx, trachea
    and bronchi rare localizations (skin, eye)
  • Degree of severity - mild, moderate, severy,
    hemorrhagic, hypertoxic
  • Form - localized, wide-spread, combined
  • Nature of process - catarrhal, island-like,
    paleaceous
  • Complications - myocarditis, neuritis, nephritis
    (early and late)
  • Subclinical (carriering)

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Clinical manifestation
  • Incubation period 2-10 days
  • Phenomena of intoxication (high fever, malaise,
    general weakness, headache)
  • Pharyngalgia - moderate
  • Changes of a throat mucous - soft hyperemia,
    edema of tonsills, covers on their surface (grey
    colour, dense, hard to remove with bleeding,
    slime), spread out of tonsills limits
    (palatopharyngeal arches, uvula, soft palate)
  • Augmentation and moderate morbidness of regional
    lymph nodes
  • Edema of a hypodermic fat of a neck

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Peculiarities of diphtheria covers (Grey colour,
dense, hard to remove with bleeding, slime),
spread out of tonsills limits (on uvula, soft
palate, palatopharyngeal archs)
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Edema of a hypodermic tissues of a neck
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Swollen neck in diphtheria
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Diphtheria of the nose
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A diphtheria skin lesion on the leg
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Features of diphtheria toxicosis
  • (In wide-spread, combined, hypertoxical,
    hemorrhagic forms) toxicosis ?, ??, ???
  • Edema of the neck hypodermic tissues
  • Paleness of skin
  • Cyanosis of lips
  • Decreasing of arterial pressure
  • Tachycardia
  • Decreasing of a body temperature

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Diphtheria of larynx
  • Real croup (stenosis of a larynx)
  • ? degree (catarrhal) - labored inspiration,
    retraction of intercostal spaces, rasping dog
    barking" cough, horse voice
  • ?? degree (stenosis) - noisy respiration,
    inspiratory dyspnea with an elongated
    inspiration, participation in respiration of
    auxiliary muscles, aphonia
  • ??? degree (asphyxia) - acute oxygen
    insufficiency, sleepiness, cyanosis, cold sweat,
    cramps, paradoxical sphygmus

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Complications
  • Infectious-toxic shock
  • Intra vessels disseminated syndrome
  • Myocarditis (early, late)
  • Polyradiculoneuritis (early, late)
  • Nephrosonephritis etc.

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LABORATORY DIAGNOSTIC
  • Detection of the agent in smears from a throat
    and nose (taking of material on border between
    effected area and normal mucous)
  • Microscopy (colouring by Neisser) typical
    locating of rods, grains of volutin in bacterias
  • Sowing on convolute serum or telluric blood agar
    for allocation of clean culture and recognizing
    of toxigenisity
  • Serological tests mirror a condition of immune
    defence (efficiency of vaccination)

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Treatment
  • Immediate hospitalization
  • Bed regimen (at localized forms - 10 days, at
    toxic - not less than 35-45 days)
  • Specific treatment - introducing of antitoxic
    antidiphtherial Serum (from 30-50 thousand IU at
    the localized forms up to 100-120 thousand IU at
    toxic, by Bezredka method)
  • Glucocorticoids (in toxic forms and croup)
  • Antibiotics (penicilini, tetracyclini,
    erythromycini)
  • Strychninum (in toxic forms)
  • In case of croup - inhalations, broncholitics,
    diuretics, glucocorticoids, antibiotics,
    antihistamine, lytic admixture under the
    indications - intubation, tracheotomy

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Conditions of discharging from a hospital
  • Clinical convalescence
  • 2 negative results of bacteriological research of
    smears from a throat and a nose with two-day
    interval
  • For decret group - additional double
    bacteriological examination in polyclinic

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Prophylaxis
  • Plan immunization (vaccination in 3, 4, 5 months.
    With ?P?T vaccine, revaccination in 18 months 6,
    11, 14, 18 years and adults every 10 years with
    ??T-? vaccine)
  • In the focus
  • 7 days medical observation after contact
    persons
  • Bacteriological examination
  • Sanation of detected carriers
  • Final disinfection
  • Revaccination

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Desinfection
  • Aeration and ultra-violet lighting of puttings,
    wet cleaning with usage of 2/3-basic salt of
    perchloron, calcium of hypochlorite, 3 of
    solution of chloraminum, 1 of solution amfolan
  • Sputum, the outwashes from a nasopharynx hash
    with double quantity of solutions, exposition 2
    hours. The tableware is boiled in 2 potassium
    solution 30 mines. Bed-clothes and clothes if
    necessary to decontaminate in desinfection camera

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Differential diagnosis
  • Tonsillitis, including Plaut-Vincent-Simanovsky
  • Herpetic tonsillitis
  • ARVI (adenoviral infection, false croup)
  • Paratonsillar abscess
  • Infectious mononucleosis
  • Scarlet fever
  • Pseudotuberculosis
  • Tonsillo-bubonic form of tularemia
  • Mycotic affection of tonsills
  • Epidemic parotitis
  • Typhoid fever
  • Lues
  • Hematological diseases (acute leukosis,
    agranulocytosis)

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Common symptoms of tonsillitis
  • sore throat
  • red, swollen tonsils
  • pain when swallowing
  • high temperature (fever)
  • coughing
  • headache
  • tiredness
  • chills
  • a general sense of feeling unwell
  • white pus-filled spots on the tonsils
  • swollen lymph nodes (glands) in the neck
  • pain in the ears or neck
  • changes to the voice or loss of voice

46
  • The diagnosis of GABHS tonsillitis can be
    confirmed by culture. Samples are obtained by
    swabbing both tonsillar surfaces and the
    posterior pharyngeal wall are plated on sheep
    blood agar medium. The isolation rate can be
    increased by incubating the cultures under
    anaerobic conditions and using selective media. A
    single throat culture has a sensitivity of 90
    -95 for the detection of GABHS. False-negative
    results are possible if the patient received
    antibiotics. The identification of GABHS requires
    24 to 48 hours. Rapid methods for GABHS detection
    (1060 minutes), are available. Rapid detection
    kits have a sensitivity of 85 to 90.

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  • Treatments to reduce the discomfort from
    tonsillitis symptoms include
  • pain relief, anti-inflammatory, fever reducing
    medications (acetaminophen/paracetamol and/or
    ibuprofen)
  • sore throat relief (warm salt water gargle,
    lozenges, and iced/cold liquids)
  • If the tonsillitis is caused by group A
    streptococus, then antibiotics are useful with
    penicillin or amoxicillin being first line.
    Cephalosporins and macrolides are considered good
    alternatives to penicillin in the acute setting.
    A macrolide such as erythromycin is used for
    people allergic to penicillin. Individuals who
    fail penicillin therapy may respond to treatment
    effective against beta-lactamase producing
    bacteria such as clindamycin or
    amoxicillin-clavulanate. Aerobic and anaerobic
    beta lactamase producing bacteria that reside in
    the tonsillar tissues can "shield" group A
    streptococcus from penicillins. When tonsillitis
    is caused by a virus, the length of illness
    depends on which virus is involved. Usually, a
    complete recovery is made within one week
    however, symptoms may last for up to two weeks.
    Chronic cases may be treated with tonsillectomy
    (surgical removal of tonsils) as a choice for
    treatment.

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Complications
  • Complications may rarely include dehydration and
    kidney failure due to difficulty swallowing,
    blocked airways due to inflammation, and
    pharyngitis due to the spread of infection.
  • An abscess may develop lateral to the tonsil
    during an infection, typically several days after
    the onset of tonsillitis. This is termed a
    peritonsillar abscess (or quinsy). Rarely, the
    infection may spread beyond the tonsil resulting
    in inflammation and infection of the internal
    jugular vein giving rise to a spreading
    septicaemia infection (Lemierre's syndrome).
  • In chronic/recurrent cases (generally defined as
    seven episodes of tonsillitis in the preceding
    year, five episodes in each of the preceding two
    years or three episodes in each of the preceding
    three years), or in acute cases where the
    palatine tonsils become so swollen that
    swallowing is impaired, a tonsillectomy can be
    performed to remove the tonsils. Patients whose
    tonsils have been removed are still protected
    from infection by the rest of their immune
    system.
  • In very rare cases of strep throat, diseases like
    rheumatic fever or glomerulonephritis can occur.
    These complications are extremely rare in
    developed nations but remain a significant
    problem in poorer nations. Tonsillitis associated
    with strep throat, if untreated, is hypothesized
    to lead to pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric
    disorders associated with streptococcal
    infections (PANDAS).

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