Diphtheria in Uganda: Causes, Symptoms and Treatment

What is Diphtheria?
Diphtheria is a serious bacterial infection caused by Corynebacterium diphtheriae. It spreads through droplets from coughs or sneezes and mainly affects the throat and nose. The bacteria produce a toxin that can cause serious complications. Symptoms usually appear 2 to 7 days after exposure.

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Cause

  • The toxin produced by Corynebacterium diphtheriae

Symptoms

  • Thick, grey, sticky membranes (pseudomembranes) on the tonsils or throat causing difficulty swallowing
  • Swollen lymph nodes in the neck, which may become very large
  • Airway obstruction that can cause breathing difficulty or suffocation if the infection spreads to the nose, voice box (larynx), windpipe (trachea), or lungs
  • Low-grade fever
  • Effects of the toxin may cause heart problems (myocarditis), nerve damage affecting swallowing, vision, breathing, and movement, usually 1–3 months after illness starts
  • Possible kidney failure

Diagnosis

  • Throat swab culture to identify the bacteria

Treatment

  • Urgent hospital referral is required
  • Isolation with contact and droplet precautions until three throat or nose swabs are negative for the bacteria
  • Procaine benzylpenicillin 1.2 million international units (MIU) given daily by intramuscular injection until swallowing improves

Dosage

  • For children, procaine benzylpenicillin 50,000 IU/kg once daily IM until swallowing is possible
  • Once swallowing improves:
    • Oral Penicillin V is given to complete 14 days
    • Adults: 250 mg every 6 hours
    • Children 1-6 years: 125 mg every 6 hours
    • Children under 1 year: 12.5 mg/kg every 6 hours

If allergic to penicillin:

  • Erythromycin 500 mg every 6 hours for 14 days in adults
  • Children receive 50 mg/kg every 6 hours

Prevention

  • Patients are isolated and close contacts are monitored for 7 days
  • Close contacts receive a single dose of benzathine penicillin by injection:
    • Children under 10 years: 600,000 IU
    • Older children and adults: 1.2 MIU
  • Immunisation status of contacts is checked, and vaccination is completed or boosted if needed
  • Routine immunisation of all children with diphtheria-containing vaccines is essential
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