00:01 Now let's cover diphtheria. 00:03 Diphtheria is a bacterial infection that primarily affects the throat and the upper airways. 00:08 This produces a toxin that can infect other organs. 00:12 There's an acute onset of symptoms including a sore throat, fever, and swollen lymph nodes. 00:18 A membrane or a pseudomembrane will develop in the throat making it difficult for the patient to breathe. 00:24 This can be life-threatening and it is vaccine preventable. 00:29 The etiology. This is caused by the bacterium, Corynebacterium diphtheria. 00:34 It usually multiplies on or near the surface of the mucous membranes of the throat. 00:40 It's spread via three routes. The first is droplets. 00:44 Patients can sneeze and cough and expel these droplets into the air. 00:48 They can also share these via contaminated personal items like their own wounds on their skin, used tissues or drinking from the same glass. 00:58 Also, after the patient has coughed there droplets, this can also settle on towels, toys and other contaminated household items. 01:06 Infected patients can spread the bacteria to nonimmune people for up to six weeks even while they're asymptomatic. 01:14 So what happens in the pathology of diphtheria? Well, there's a release of a toxin there's gonna be local growth of the bacterium into the pharynx with a pseudomembrane forming. 01:25 And this is a combination of fibrin, white blood cells, bacteria and dead surface-tissue cells. 01:31 The areas most commonly involved are of the tonsillar zones. 01:35 The larynx which is the voicebox, the soft pallet, the uvula and even in the nose and the nasal cavities. 01:44 This pseudomembrane is going to adhere so tightly it cannot be scraped off by the clinician. 01:49 There will be blockage of the airways by the pseudomembrane, and this is the deadly complication of diphtheria. 01:57 There can be systemic dissemination of this toxin that's going to then spread to the distant organs. 02:03 The incubation time is about 27 days after exposure. 02:07 So, the patients don't even remember where they could've possibly picked this up.
The lecture Diphtheria: Etiology and Pathology (Pediatric Nursing) by Paula Ruedebusch is from the course Infectious Diseases – Pediatric Nursing.
How can diphtheria be life-threatening?
5 Stars |
|
5 |
4 Stars |
|
0 |
3 Stars |
|
0 |
2 Stars |
|
0 |
1 Star |
|
0 |