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Questions & Answers
What causes diphtheria?
Diphtheria is caused by a bacterium, Corynebacterium diphtheriae. The actual
disease is caused when the bacteria release a toxin, or poison, into a person's
body.
How does diphtheria spread?
Diphtheria bacteria live in the mouth, throat, and nose of an infected person
and can be passed to others by coughing or sneezing. Occasionally, transmission
occurs from skin sores or through articles soiled with oozing from sores of
infected people.
How long does it take to show signs of
diphtheria after being exposed?
The incubation period is short: 2–5 days, with a range of 1–10 days.
What are the symptoms of diphtheria?
Early symptoms of diphtheria may mimic a cold with a sore throat, mild fever,
and chills. Usually, the disease causes a thick coating at the back of the
throat, which can make it difficult to breathe or swallow. Other body sites
besides the throat can also be affected, including the nose, larynx, eye,
vagina, and skin.
How serious is diphtheria?
Diphtheria is a serious disease: 5%10% of all people with diphtheria die. Up to
20% of cases lead to death in certain age groups of individuals (e.g., children
younger than age 5 years and adults older than age 40 years).
What are possible complications from diphtheria?
Most complications of diphtheria are due to the release of the toxin, or poison.
The most common complications are
inflammation of the heart leading to abnormal heart rhythms, and inflammation of
the nerves which may cause temporary
paralysis of some muscles. If the paralysis affects the diaphragm (the major
muscle for breathing), the patient may develop
pneumonia or respiratory failure. The thick membrane coating at the back of the
throat may cause serious breathing problems,
including suffocation.
How do I know if someone has diphtheria?
The diagnosis of diphtheria can only be confirmed after a physician takes a
small sample of infected material from the
patient's throat (or other site) and has the sample tested in a laboratory. But
because this disease progresses quickly,
treatment usually should begin based on the health professional's assessment of
the patient.
Is there a treatment for diphtheria?
Diphtheria is treated with both antibiotics and with diphtheria antitoxin.
Diphtheria antitoxin is produced in horses and was
first used in the United States in 1891. Antitoxin does not get rid of toxin
that is already attached to the body's tissues,
but will neutralize any circulating poison and will prevent the disease from
getting worse. The patient should be tested for
sensitivity to this antitoxin before it is given.
How long is a person with diphtheria contagious?
The disease usually becomes non-contagious 48 hours after antibiotics are
started. However, some individuals continue to
carry the diphtheria bacterium even after antibiotic therapy, and treatment
should be continued until patients have two
consecutive negative cultures. People providing care for an individual with
diphtheria should take standard contact
precautions and make sure they have been adequately immunized against
diphtheria.
How common is diphtheria in the United States?
Diphtheria was once a greatly feared illness in the United States. In the 1920s,
there were between 100,000 and 200,000 cases
of diphtheria each year with 13,000–15,000 deaths. Because of widespread
immunization and better living conditions,
diphtheria is now rare in the United States (during 1998–2003, seven cases of
respiratory diphtheria were reported to CDC).
There were no cases reported during the years 2004 through 2009.
Recent surveys have found that immunity decreases with age, and only 30% of U.S.
adults age 6069 years are vaccinated
against diphtheria. This is a concern because the disease continues to occur in
other parts of the world. For example, after
the breakup of the former Soviet Union, their vaccination rates fell, and large
outbreaks of diphtheria began in 1990 in the
Newly Independent States. From 1990 to 1998, more than 150,000 people got sick
from diphtheria and more than 5,000 people
died. This situation, and other outbreaks around the world, illustrates what can
happen when vaccination levels fall.
Outbreaks in other countries also increase the risk of diphtheria importation
into the United States.
Can you get diphtheria more than once?
Yes. Even individuals recovering from diphtheria should be immunized against the
disease as soon as possible.
Questions and answers
about diphtheria vaccine
Technical content reviewed by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, November 2010
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