Corynebacterium diphtheriae: Difference between revisions

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Corynebacterium diphtheriae
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== Background ==
==Background==
=== History ===
===History===
* Derived from the Greek word for leather


*Derived from the Greek word for leather
=== Microbiology ===
* Non-spore-forming, pleomorphic, unencapsulated, nonmotile [[Stain::Gram-positive]] [[Has cell shape::bacillus]] with clubbed ends
* Needs to be cultured on special media, so notify the lab
** On Loeffler medium, outgrows other throat flora by 12 to 18 hours
* Classic "Chinese character" appearance on Gram stain (pallisading) of all Corynebacteria
* Metachromatic granules on methylene blue
* Four biovars: gravis, intermedius, mitis, and belfanti
** Based on morphology, fermentation, and hemolysis, but now more often based on PCR ribotyping
** Not clinically significant


=== Pathophysiology ===
===Microbiology===
* Contains a polypeptide exotoxin that is cleaved into segment A, the active segment, and B, which binds receptors on susceptible cells (heparin-binding epidermal growth factor receptor)
* Segment A enters the cytosol after B binds, and inactivates mammalian tRNA translocase (elongation factor 2), which stops protein synthesis
** Affects all cells, but heart, nerves, and kidneys are particularly sensitive
* In the respiratory tract, causes the formation of a necrotic coagulum of fibrin, WBCs, RBCs, and epithelial cells
** Appears clinically as a pseudomemrane


*Non-spore-forming, pleomorphic, unencapsulated, nonmotile [[Stain::Gram-positive]] [[Has cell shape::bacillus]] with clubbed ends
=== Epidemiology ===
*Needs to be cultured on special media, so notify the lab
**On Loeffler medium, outgrows other throat flora by 12 to 18 hours
*Classic "Chinese character" appearance on Gram stain (pallisading) of all Corynebacteria
*Metachromatic granules on methylene blue
*Four biovars: gravis, intermedius, mitis, and belfanti
**Based on morphology, fermentation, and hemolysis, but now more often based on PCR ribotyping
**Not clinically significant


===Pathophysiology===
* Spread by droplets and direct contact, and via fomites
* Mostly occurs in colder months
* Asymptomatic carriage is an important reservoir for the organism, with 3-5% carriage rates in endemic areas


*Contains a polypeptide exotoxin that is cleaved into segment A, the active segment, and B, which binds receptors on susceptible cells (heparin-binding epidermal growth factor receptor)
== Diphtheria ==
*Segment A enters the cytosol after B binds, and inactivates mammalian tRNA translocase (elongation factor 2), which stops protein synthesis
* Clinical syndrome of pharyngeal infection with systemic toxicity caused by ''C. diphtheriae'' and ''C. ulcerans''
**Affects all cells, but heart, nerves, and kidneys are particularly sensitive
*In the respiratory tract, causes the formation of a necrotic coagulum of fibrin, WBCs, RBCs, and epithelial cells
**Appears clinically as a pseudomembrane


===Epidemiology===
=== Clinical Manifestations ===
* Incubation period of [[Usual incubation period::2 to 4 days]]
* Low-grade fever, hoarseness, pain, and laryngeal pseudomembrane that can cause stridor and obstruction
** Pseudomembrane starts white but later dirty gray with patches of green or black
** Bleeding if membrane is removed
** Can have a bullneck appearance
* Can also have serosanguineous nasal discharge and cervical lymphadenopathy
* Palatal paralysis and cranial nerve defects may cause dysphagia
* Systemic symptoms related to extent of local disease


*Spread by droplets and direct contact, and via fomites
==== Myocarditis ====
*Mostly occurs in colder months
* 10-25% of cases
*Asymptomatic carriage is an important reservoir for the organism, with 3-5% carriage rates in endemic areas
* Can range from acute heart failure and cardiogenic shock to more subacute heart failure and dilatation
** Can be monitored with AST (?and troponin?)
* ECG may show ST-T wave changes and first-degree heart block, which can progress to complete heart block
** Mortality is higher with ECG changes, and highest with AV blocks and LBBB
** Can be permanent
** Monitor for arrhythmias


==Diphtheria==
==== Neurotoxicity ====
* Acutely, can manifest as paralysis of the soft palate and posterior pharynx, causing dysphagia
** Followed by cranial nerve defects
* After 10 days to 3 months, can develop a peripheral motor neuropathy from demyelination
** Generally fully resolves with time


*Clinical syndrome of pharyngeal infection with systemic toxicity caused by ''C. diphtheriae'' and ''C. ulcerans''
==== Tubular necrosis ====
* Caused by both the toxin itself and the septic shock


===Clinical Manifestations===
=== Differential Diagnosis ===
* [[Infectious mononucleosis]]
* Streptococcal or viral [[pharyngitis]]
* [[Vincent angina]]
* [[Acute epiglottitis]]


*Incubation period of [[Usual incubation period::2 to 4 days]]
=== Diagnosis ===
*Low-grade fever, hoarseness, pain, and laryngeal pseudomembrane that can cause stridor and obstruction
* Clinical diagnosis based on:
**Pseudomembrane starts white but later dirty gray with patches of green or black
** Mildly painful tonsilitis or pharyngitis with a membrane, especially if the memrane extends to the uvula and soft palate
**Bleeding if membrane is removed
** Adenopathy and cervical swelling, especially if assocaited with memranous pharyngitis and signs of systemic toxicity
**Can have a bullneck appearance
** Hoarseness and stridor
*Can also have serosanguineous nasal discharge and cervical lymphadenopathy
** Palatal paralysis
*Palatal paralysis and cranial nerve defects may cause dysphagia
** Serosanguineous nasal discharge with associated mucosal membrane
*Systemic symptoms related to extent of local disease
** Temperature not over 102.5ΒΊF (39ΒΊC)
** History of travel to endemic country
* Can confirm with culture and Gram stain ("Chinese characters")
* PCR for the toxin gene exists


=== Management ===
====Myocarditis====
* Treat presumptively while awaiting confirmation of the diagnosis
* Start with with diphtheria antitoxin (DAT)
** Antiserum made in horses
** Prevents toxin from entering the cell
** First must rule out horse protein hypersensitivity
*** History of allergy
*** Scratch test: drop of 1:1000 dilution applied to superficial scratch; if no wheal in 15 minutes, inject 0.02 mL of 1:1000 dilution intracutaneously
**** Epipen at the ready!
** Dose depends on duration of symptoms
*** ≀48 hours: 20,000-40,000 units
*** β‰₯3 days: 80,000-120,000 units, including anyone with neck swelling
*** Nasopharyngeal: 40,000-80,000 units
** Diluted in 250-500 mL NS and infused over 60-120 minutes
** 10% risk of serum sickness
* Adults
** Penicillin G 600,000 units IM q12h
** Pencillin V 250 mg
** Erythromycin 500 mg qid
** Duration 14 days
* Culture 2 weeks after treatment for test-of-cure


*10-25% of cases
=== Infection Control ===
*Can range from acute heart failure and cardiogenic shock to more subacute heart failure and dilatation
* Must be in isolation throughout therapy and until two negative cultures at 24 hour intervals
**Can be monitored with AST (?and troponin?)
*ECG may show ST-T wave changes and first-degree heart block, which can progress to complete heart block
**Mortality is higher with ECG changes, and highest with AV blocks and LBBB
**Can be permanent
**Monitor for arrhythmias


====Neurotoxicity====
=== Complications and Prognosis ===
* Suffocation from aspiration of the pseudomembrane
* Rarely, bacteremia, endocarditis, and arthritis from hematogenous spread
* Mortality 3-12% even now, usually from asphyxiation or myocarditis, but is rare in immunized patients


*Acutely, can manifest as paralysis of the soft palate and posterior pharynx, causing dysphagia
== Cutaneous Diphteria ==
**Followed by cranial nerve defects
* Can also cause chronic non-healing ulcers with dirty-gray membrane, often with concommitant ''Staph. aureus'' or group A streptococci
*After 10 days to 3 months, can develop a peripheral motor neuropathy from demyelination
* Generally not invasive and can cause immunity, but also contribute to the organism's reservoir
**Generally fully resolves with time


====Tubular necrosis====
== Carrier State ==
* ''C. diphtheriae'' not particularly invascive and can colonize the respiratory tract and skin
* Common in areas that do not vaccinate, as well as inner cities and rural areas
* Should be treated to prevent infection with benzathine penicillin G 600,000 to 1,200,000 units IM once


*Caused by both the toxin itself and the septic shock
== Prophylaxis ==
* Healthcare workers, close contacts, etc. regardless of immunization status
* Collect culture specimens before treatment (for public health tracing)
* Treated to prevent infection with benzathine penicillin G 600,000 to 1,200,000 units IM once
* Immunize if not immunized


===Differential Diagnosis===
== Vaccination ==

*[[Infectious mononucleosis]]
*Streptococcal or viral [[pharyngitis]]
*[[Vincent angina]]
*[[Acute epiglottitis]]

===Diagnosis===

*Clinical diagnosis based on:
**Mildly painful tonsilitis or pharyngitis with a membrane, especially if the memrane extends to the uvula and soft palate
**Adenopathy and cervical swelling, especially if assocaited with memranous pharyngitis and signs of systemic toxicity
**Hoarseness and stridor
**Palatal paralysis
**Serosanguineous nasal discharge with associated mucosal membrane
**Temperature not over 102.5ΒΊF (39ΒΊC)
**History of travel to endemic country
*Can confirm with culture and Gram stain ("Chinese characters")
*PCR for the toxin gene exists

===Management===

*Treat presumptively while awaiting confirmation of the diagnosis
*Start with with diphtheria antitoxin (DAT)
**Antiserum made in horses
**Prevents toxin from entering the cell
**First must rule out horse protein hypersensitivity
***History of allergy
***Scratch test: drop of 1:1000 dilution applied to superficial scratch; if no wheal in 15 minutes, inject 0.02 mL of 1:1000 dilution intracutaneously
****Epipen at the ready!
**Dose depends on duration of symptoms
***≀48 hours: 20,000-40,000 units
***β‰₯3 days: 80,000-120,000 units, including anyone with neck swelling
***Nasopharyngeal: 40,000-80,000 units
**Diluted in 250-500 mL NS and infused over 60-120 minutes
**10% risk of serum sickness
*Adults
**Penicillin G 600,000 units IM q12h
**Pencillin V 250 mg
**Erythromycin 500 mg qid
**Duration 14 days
*Culture 2 weeks after treatment for test-of-cure

===Infection Control===

*Must be in isolation throughout therapy and until two negative cultures at 24 hour intervals

===Complications and Prognosis===

*Suffocation from aspiration of the pseudomembrane
*Rarely, bacteremia, endocarditis, and arthritis from hematogenous spread
*Mortality 3-12% even now, usually from asphyxiation or myocarditis, but is rare in immunized patients

==Cutaneous Diphteria==

*Can also cause chronic non-healing ulcers with dirty-gray membrane, often with concommitant ''Staph. aureus'' or group A streptococci
*Generally not invasive and can cause immunity, but also contribute to the organism's reservoir

==Carrier State==

*''C. diphtheriae'' not particularly invascive and can colonize the respiratory tract and skin
*Common in areas that do not vaccinate, as well as inner cities and rural areas
*Should be treated to prevent infection with benzathine penicillin G 600,000 to 1,200,000 units IM once

==Prophylaxis==

*Healthcare workers, close contacts, etc. regardless of immunization status
*Collect culture specimens before treatment (for public health tracing)
*Treated to prevent infection with benzathine penicillin G 600,000 to 1,200,000 units IM once
*Immunize if not immunized

==Vaccination==


{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Corynebacterium diphtheriae''}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Corynebacterium diphtheriae''}}

Revision as of 09:31, 17 August 2020

Background

History

  • Derived from the Greek word for leather

Microbiology

  • Non-spore-forming, pleomorphic, unencapsulated, nonmotile Gram-positive bacillus with clubbed ends
  • Needs to be cultured on special media, so notify the lab
    • On Loeffler medium, outgrows other throat flora by 12 to 18 hours
  • Classic "Chinese character" appearance on Gram stain (pallisading) of all Corynebacteria
  • Metachromatic granules on methylene blue
  • Four biovars: gravis, intermedius, mitis, and belfanti
    • Based on morphology, fermentation, and hemolysis, but now more often based on PCR ribotyping
    • Not clinically significant

Pathophysiology

  • Contains a polypeptide exotoxin that is cleaved into segment A, the active segment, and B, which binds receptors on susceptible cells (heparin-binding epidermal growth factor receptor)
  • Segment A enters the cytosol after B binds, and inactivates mammalian tRNA translocase (elongation factor 2), which stops protein synthesis
    • Affects all cells, but heart, nerves, and kidneys are particularly sensitive
  • In the respiratory tract, causes the formation of a necrotic coagulum of fibrin, WBCs, RBCs, and epithelial cells
    • Appears clinically as a pseudomembrane

Epidemiology

  • Spread by droplets and direct contact, and via fomites
  • Mostly occurs in colder months
  • Asymptomatic carriage is an important reservoir for the organism, with 3-5% carriage rates in endemic areas

Diphtheria

  • Clinical syndrome of pharyngeal infection with systemic toxicity caused by C. diphtheriae and C. ulcerans

Clinical Manifestations

  • Incubation period of 2 to 4 days
  • Low-grade fever, hoarseness, pain, and laryngeal pseudomembrane that can cause stridor and obstruction
    • Pseudomembrane starts white but later dirty gray with patches of green or black
    • Bleeding if membrane is removed
    • Can have a bullneck appearance
  • Can also have serosanguineous nasal discharge and cervical lymphadenopathy
  • Palatal paralysis and cranial nerve defects may cause dysphagia
  • Systemic symptoms related to extent of local disease

Myocarditis

  • 10-25% of cases
  • Can range from acute heart failure and cardiogenic shock to more subacute heart failure and dilatation
    • Can be monitored with AST (?and troponin?)
  • ECG may show ST-T wave changes and first-degree heart block, which can progress to complete heart block
    • Mortality is higher with ECG changes, and highest with AV blocks and LBBB
    • Can be permanent
    • Monitor for arrhythmias

Neurotoxicity

  • Acutely, can manifest as paralysis of the soft palate and posterior pharynx, causing dysphagia
    • Followed by cranial nerve defects
  • After 10 days to 3 months, can develop a peripheral motor neuropathy from demyelination
    • Generally fully resolves with time

Tubular necrosis

  • Caused by both the toxin itself and the septic shock

Differential Diagnosis

Diagnosis

  • Clinical diagnosis based on:
    • Mildly painful tonsilitis or pharyngitis with a membrane, especially if the memrane extends to the uvula and soft palate
    • Adenopathy and cervical swelling, especially if assocaited with memranous pharyngitis and signs of systemic toxicity
    • Hoarseness and stridor
    • Palatal paralysis
    • Serosanguineous nasal discharge with associated mucosal membrane
    • Temperature not over 102.5ΒΊF (39ΒΊC)
    • History of travel to endemic country
  • Can confirm with culture and Gram stain ("Chinese characters")
  • PCR for the toxin gene exists

Management

  • Treat presumptively while awaiting confirmation of the diagnosis
  • Start with with diphtheria antitoxin (DAT)
    • Antiserum made in horses
    • Prevents toxin from entering the cell
    • First must rule out horse protein hypersensitivity
      • History of allergy
      • Scratch test: drop of 1:1000 dilution applied to superficial scratch; if no wheal in 15 minutes, inject 0.02 mL of 1:1000 dilution intracutaneously
        • Epipen at the ready!
    • Dose depends on duration of symptoms
      • ≀48 hours: 20,000-40,000 units
      • β‰₯3 days: 80,000-120,000 units, including anyone with neck swelling
      • Nasopharyngeal: 40,000-80,000 units
    • Diluted in 250-500 mL NS and infused over 60-120 minutes
    • 10% risk of serum sickness
  • Adults
    • Penicillin G 600,000 units IM q12h
    • Pencillin V 250 mg
    • Erythromycin 500 mg qid
    • Duration 14 days
  • Culture 2 weeks after treatment for test-of-cure

Infection Control

  • Must be in isolation throughout therapy and until two negative cultures at 24 hour intervals

Complications and Prognosis

  • Suffocation from aspiration of the pseudomembrane
  • Rarely, bacteremia, endocarditis, and arthritis from hematogenous spread
  • Mortality 3-12% even now, usually from asphyxiation or myocarditis, but is rare in immunized patients

Cutaneous Diphteria

  • Can also cause chronic non-healing ulcers with dirty-gray membrane, often with concommitant Staph. aureus or group A streptococci
  • Generally not invasive and can cause immunity, but also contribute to the organism's reservoir

Carrier State

  • C. diphtheriae not particularly invascive and can colonize the respiratory tract and skin
  • Common in areas that do not vaccinate, as well as inner cities and rural areas
  • Should be treated to prevent infection with benzathine penicillin G 600,000 to 1,200,000 units IM once

Prophylaxis

  • Healthcare workers, close contacts, etc. regardless of immunization status
  • Collect culture specimens before treatment (for public health tracing)
  • Treated to prevent infection with benzathine penicillin G 600,000 to 1,200,000 units IM once
  • Immunize if not immunized

Vaccination