Diphtheria is an acute bacterial disease that usually affects the tonsils, throat, nose and/or skin.
What is diphtheria?
Diphtheria is an acute bacterial disease that usually affects the tonsils, throat, nose and/or skin. It is passed from person to person by droplet transmission, usually by breathing in diphtheria bacteria after an infected person has coughed, sneezed or even laughed. It can also be spread by handling used tissues or by drinking from a glass used by an infected person. Diphtheria can lead to breathing problems, heart failure, paralysis and sometimes death.
Prevention
There is a vaccine for diphtheria. Most people receive their first dose as children in the form of a combined vaccine called DTP (diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis).
For adults, a combination shot, called a Td booster, protects against both tetanus and diphtheria. It should be administered once every 10 years after age 7 to maintain immunity.
Symptoms
In its early stages, diphtheria may be mistaken for a severe sore throat. Other symptoms include a low-grade fever and enlarged lymph nodes (swollen glands) located in the neck. Another presentation of diphtheria can be skin lesions that may be painful, red and swollen. Symptoms usually appear 2 to 4 days after infection, with a range of 1 to 6 days. People carrying diphtheria germs are contagious for up to 4 weeks without antibiotic therapy, even if they themselves do not develop symptoms.
Who should get Td vaccine?
- All persons who did not receive a primary series of immunization against tetanus and diphtheria during childhood.
- Persons who have not received a booster dose within the past 10 years.
- All adolescents and adults who deferred their regular booster during 2001-2002 because of shortages of the vaccine -- the supply problems have been resolved.
Vaccine SafetyThe tetanus-diphtheria (Td) vaccine is very safe. When side effects do occur, they are usually soreness, redness or swelling at the injection site, and a slight fever. As with any medicine, there are very small risks that serious problems, such as an allergic reaction or neurologic condition, could occur after getting a vaccine. However, the potential risks associated with diphtheria are much greater than the potential risks associated with the diphtheria vaccine. You cannot get diphtheria from the vaccine.
FACT: Diphtheria can be prevented with a safe and effective vaccine.
FACT: You cannot get diphtheria from the vaccine.
FACT: Diphtheria is transmitted to others through close contact with discharges from an infected person's nose, throat, eyes and/or skin lesions.
FACT: Nearly one out of every 10 people who get diphtheria will die from it.
FACT: Diphtheria can lead to breathing problems, heart failure, paralysis and sometimes death.
FACT: Most cases of diphtheria occur among unvaccinated or inadequately vaccinated people.
FACT: Recovery from diphtheria is not always followed by lasting immunity, so even those persons who have survived the disease need to be immunized.
FACT: A tetanus-diphtheria (Td) shot every 10 years gives protection against these two diseases.
FACT: Although no longer a very common disease in the United States, diphtheria remains a large problem in other countries and can pose a serious threat to United States citizens who may not be fully immunized and who travel to other countries or have contact with immigrants or international travelers coming to the U.S.
FACT: A recent epidemic of diphtheria in Eastern Europe and the New Independent States of the former Soviet Union resulted in over 5,000 deaths between 1990 and 1995.
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