1 / 50

Infectious diseases with tonsillitis. Diphtheria

Infectious diseases with tonsillitis. Diphtheria. Lecturer Gorishna Ivanna Lubomyrivna. Plan of the lecture. Definition of Diphtheria Etiology Transmission Pathogenesis Classification and clinical presentation Complications Diagnostic tests Differential diagnose Treatment Prevention.

Télécharger la présentation

Infectious diseases with tonsillitis. Diphtheria

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Infectious diseases with tonsillitis. Diphtheria Lecturer GorishnaIvannaLubomyrivna

  2. Plan of the lecture • Definition of Diphtheria • Etiology • Transmission • Pathogenesis • Classification and clinical presentation • Complications • Diagnostic tests • Differential diagnose • Treatment • Prevention

  3. Diphtheria is Diphtheria is an acute toxicoinfection caused by toxigenic strains of Corynebacterium diphtheriae, characterized by a local lesion consisting of a membrane. The constitutional symptoms are due to exotoxin circulation, which has a special affinity for nerve tissue, heart muscle and kidneys.

  4. ETIOLOGY • Corynebacterium species are aerobic, nonencapsulated, non-sporeforming, mostly nonmotile, gram-positive bacilli. • Sensitive to high temperature and disinfection • Stabile to freezing and dryness • Three biotypes – • mitis • gravis • intermedius

  5. Transmission Transmission is from person-to-person (from a patientorcarrier) • through direct contact • or airborne respiratory droplets Thesematerialsincludedischargefromthenose, throat, andlesionsontheskin, eyesandeventhevagina. Contagious index – 10-15% Seasonality – autumn-winter Immunity – instable

  6. Incubation period • Short (from one to seven days)

  7. Pathogenesis • Entrance for the infection: throat, nose, larynx, sex organs, wound. • Dissemination of the Corynebacterium, production of exotoxin. • Local toxin effects with membranous inflammation. • Toxemia. • Diffuse toxic effects on kidneys, suprarenal glands, cardiovascular system, and peripheral nervous system.

  8. Fibrinous inflammation • Diphtheritic (on flat multilayer epithelium) • Crupous (on cylindrical one layer epithelium)

  9. Classification of Diphtheria • Diphtheria of the tonsils and pharynx • localized (catarrhal, islet-like, membranous) • spread form • toxic form: • I degree • II degree • III degree • hypertoxic • hemorrhagic form • gangrenous form

  10. Diphtheria of the tonsils, localized, membranous (moderate)

  11. Diphtheria of the tonsils, localized, membranous (moderate)

  12. Diphtheria of the tonsils, spread (moderate)

  13. Diphtheria of the tonsils, toxic (severe)

  14. Diphtheria of the tonsils, toxic (neck edema)

  15. Classification of Diphtheria Diphtheria of the respiratory tract (croup) • Localized croup (laryngitis) • Spread croup • laryngotracheitis • laryngotracheobronchitis • Stages of croup • Catarrhal croup • Stenosis • Compensated • Subcompensated • Decompensated • Asphyxia

  16. Classification of Diphtheria • Diphtheria of the nasopharynx(adenoiditis) • Diphtheria of the nose • localized • catarrhal • islet-like • membranous • Spread • toxic • Combined form • Rare forms (localized, spread, toxic) • eye • ear • skin • genital tract

  17. Diphtheria of the nose

  18. Diphtheria of the lip

  19. Classification of Diphtheria

  20. Classification of Diphtheria The course of disease • With complication • Without complication

  21. Classification of Diphtheria Bacilli carrying • Transitional carrying • Short time – up to 2 wks • Prolong carrying - more than 1 mo • Chronic carrying – more than 6 mo

  22. Complications • early: • Toxic shock syndrome; • DIC syndrome • Acute adrenal insufficiency; • Renal insufficiency • Respiratory insufficiency • Plural organs insufficiency • (in the end of 1st to 2nd week) nephritis; myocarditis; peripheral cranial nerves palsies; • late (on the 3rd to 7th week): myocarditis; peripheral spinal nerves palsies.

  23. Death may occur from • Toxemia toward the end of the firth week • Cardiac failure from toxic myocarditis (second week of illness) • Respiratory failure due to peripheral neuritis affecting the vagus nerve (third to seventh week)

  24. Diagnostic tests • used to confirm infection combine isolation of C diphtheriae on cultures with toxigenicity testing. • Bacteriologic culturing is essential to confirm the diagnosis of diphtheria. • Toxigenicity testing: Perform toxigenicity testing using the Elek test to determine if the C diphtheriae isolate produces toxin. • Polymerase chain reaction

  25. Differential diagnose • Diphtheria of the pharynx must be differentiated from scarlet fever, acute bacterial tonsillitis, infectious mononucleosis; • diphtheria of the upper respiratory tract– with viral croup caused by parainfluenza, measles, chickenpox, and influenza viruses.

  26. Bacterial tonsillitis (follicular)

  27. Bacterial tonsillitis (lacunar)

  28. Bacterial tonsillitis (lacunar)

  29. Bacterial tonsillitis (necrotizing)

  30. Bacterial tonsillitis (membra-nose) in patient with scarlet fever

  31. Candid's tonsillitis

  32. Infectious mononucleosis

  33. Infectious mononucleosis

  34. Infectious mononucleosis

  35. Infectious mononucleosis

  36. Infectious mononucleosis

  37. Infectious mononucleosis

  38. Perytonsillitis

  39. Perytonsillar abscess

  40. Mumps

  41. Viral croup: • Acute development • Stenosis of1st-2nddegree, • Absence of gradual development, • Absence of aphonia, loud voice • Other clinical signs (rash, rhinitis, pharyngitis) • Moderate or severe intoxication, • Edema of the sub vocal space, • Negative bacterial culture

  42. Treatment • Absolute bed regime (2-3 wks) • Diphtheritic antitoxin therapy • Antibacterial therapy • BENZYLPENICILLIN Na 50-100 000 lU/kg/day • Erythromycin 40-50 мg/кg/day • Roxitromycin 5-8 mg/kg • Rifampicin 10-15 мg/кg/day • Antiseptic fluids locally • Desensitization (suprastinum) • Vitamins B-group, C • Disintoxication therapy (50-100 ml/kg/day) • In case of severe form corticosteroids therapy prednisolone 2-3 mg/kg/day hydrocortizone 5-10 mg/kg/day

  43. Administration of Antitoxin for Treatment of Diphtheria

  44. Administration of Antitoxin for Treatment of Diphtheria

  45. In case of toxic shock syndrome: • - Immediately intravenous infusion of DAT with prednisone intravenously 30-50 mg before DAT; • - Prednisone 10-20 mg/kg/day in equal doses 2-4 times per day; • - Detoxication, correction of acid-base stability and electrolytes; • - Dopamine, trental, corglicon.

  46. In case of diphtheria of the larynx(except DAT): • - Inhalation of antiedematous drugs (2% NaHCO3, hydrocortisone, euphyllin, and mucolithics); • suctioning of membranes and mucus; • inhalation of oxygen; • in the III stage of stenosis – intubation; • In case of spread croup, combined with diphtheria of pharynx – tracheotomy.

  47. Carriers’ treatment: • Erythromycin 40-50 мg/кg/day • Roxitromycin 5-8 mg/kg • Rifampicin 10-15 мg/кg/day • Antiseptic fluids locally • Vitamins B-group, C • Immune modulators in case of chronic site of infection, • Tonsillectomy, adenotomy in case of chronic carrying.

  48. Patients discharge • healthy; • Patient should be isolated until three consecutive throat swabs take 24 hrs apart after stopping treatment, are negative • Mild and moderate in 14-21 days; • Severe – in 30-60 days.

  49. Prevention specific • Immunization by DTP vaccine from 3 months age 3 times in 30 days interval (3, 4, 5 months), revaccination in 18 months (DTP), 6, 14, 18 years (DT), later – every 10 years.

  50. Prevention nonspecific • Close contacts who were previously immunized longer then 5 years before should receive booster dose of diphtherial toxicoid • Antibiotic (erythromycin, rifampin) orally for 7 days • Revealing, sanation of healthy infected persons, • contacts’ examination for 10 days, • disinfection of epidemic focus.

More Related