Diphtheria: Vaccine Preventable Diseases Surveillance Standards
     Overview
Diphtheria is caused by Corynebacterium species, mostly 
by toxin-producing Corynebacterium diphtheriae and 
rarely by toxin-producing strains of C. ulcerans and C. 
pseudotuberculosis. The most common type of diphtheria 
is classic respiratory diphtheria, whereby the exotoxin 
produced characteristically causes the formation of 
a pseudomembrane in the upper respiratory tract 
and damages other organs, usually the myocardium 
and peripheral nerves. Acute respiratory obstruction, 
acute systemic toxicity, myocarditis and neurologic 
complications are the usual causes of death. The 
infection can also affect the skin (cutaneous diphtheria). 
More rarely, it can affect mucous membranes at other 
non-respiratory sites, such as genitalia and conjunctiva. 
C. diphtheriae is transmitted from person to person by 
intimate respiratory and direct contact; in contrast, C. 
ulcerans and C. pseudotuberculosis are zoonotic infections, 
not transmitted person-to-person. The incubation 
period of C. diphtheriae is two to five days (range 
1– 10 days). A person is infectious as long as virulent 
bacteria are present in respiratory secretions, usually 
two weeks without antibiotics, and seldom more than 
six weeks. In rare cases, chronic carriers may shed 
organisms for six months or more. Skin lesions are often 
chronic and infectious for longer periods. Effective 
antibiotic therapy (penicillin or erythromycin) promptly 
terminates shedding in about one or two days.