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Nontoxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae: An Emerging Pathogen in England and Wales?


Confirmed isolates of nontoxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae Corynebacterium diph·the·ri·ae
n.
Klebs-Loeffler bacillus.


Corynebacterium diphtheriae The causative agent of diphtheria, which produces a potent exotoxin Reservoir Humans Epidemiology Airborne, infected fomites,
 in England and Wales England and Wales are both constituent countries of the United Kingdom, that together share a single legal system: English law. Legislatively, England and Wales are treated as a single unit (see State (law)) for the conflict of laws.  increased substantially from 1986 to 1994. Ribotyping of 121 isolates confirmed in 1995 showed that 90 were of a single strain isolated exclusively from the throat; none had previously been identified in toxigenic toxigenic /tox·i·gen·ic/ (tok?si-jen´ik)
1. producing or elaborating toxins.

2. derived from or containing toxins.


tox·i·gen·ic
adj.
Producing a poison; toxicogenic.
 strains from U.K. or non-U.K. residents. The upward trend in nontoxigenic C. diphtheriae probably represented increased ascertainment, although dissemination of a particular strain or clone may have been a factor.

Clusters of cases of sore throat Sore Throat Definition

Sore throat, also called pharyngitis, is a painful inflammation of the mucous membranes lining the pharynx. It is a symptom of many conditions, but most often is associated with colds or influenza.
 associated with isolation of nontoxigenic Corynbacterium diphtheriae were detected in gay men attending a genitourinary medicine clinic, military recruits, and children from a religious community in England and Wales in the late 1980s to mid-1990s (1-4). To determine the public health importance of the increase in cases, the Public Health Laboratory Service's (PHLS's) Streptococcus streptococcus (strĕp'təkŏk`əs), any of a group of gram-positive bacteria, genus Streptococcus, some of which cause disease.  and Diphtheria diphtheria (dĭfthēr`ēə), acute contagious disease caused by Corynebacterium diphtheriae (Klebs-Loffler bacillus) bacteria that have been infected by a bacteriophage. It begins as a soreness of the throat with fever.  Reference Unit and the PHLS PHLS Public Health Laboratory Service
PHLS Portable Helicopter Lighting Set
 Communicable Disease communicable disease
n.
A disease that is transmitted through direct contact with an infected individual or indirectly through a vector. Also called contagious disease.
 Surveillance Centre obtained more complete clinical information on nontoxigenic isolates referred in 1995 and 1996. Isolates received in 1995 were further characterized by molecular typing (ribotyping).

The Study

Laboratories in England and Wales routinely submit isolates of C. diphtheriae to the PHLS Streptococcus and Diphtheria Reference Unit for confirmation and toxin determination by both phenotypic (Elek and other immunoassays) and genotypic (polymerase chain reaction polymerase chain reaction (pŏl`ĭmərās') (PCR), laboratory process in which a particular DNA segment from a mixture of DNA chains is rapidly replicated, producing a large, readily analyzed sample of a piece of DNA; the process is ) methods (5,6). Routine screening of throat swabs with selective culture media for C. diphtheriae was encouraged in public health laboratories in England and Wales (7). Clinical and epidemiologic information was obtained from questionnaires sent to referring laboratories and from laboratory request forms. Responsibility for completion and return of the enhanced surveillance questionnaires was taken by laboratory staff, in consultation with senior medical microbiologists and attending physicians with access to laboratory and medical records. The questionnaires, which included history of recent travel, symptoms and signs of illness, general medical history, clinical management (particularly antibiotic treatment, contact tracing, and treatment of contacts) and bacteriologic bac·te·ri·ol·o·gy  
n.
The study of bacteria, especially in relation to medicine and agriculture.



bac·te
 and virologic investigations, were sent retrospectively for isolates received by the PHLS diphtheria unit from January to June 1995 and prospectively through 1996 (8). Isolates confirmed as nontoxigenic C. diphtheriae during 1995 were ribotyped. The isolates were referred from laboratories in England, Wales Wales, Welsh Cymru, western peninsula and political division (principality) of Great Britain (1991 pop. 2,798,200), 8,016 sq mi (20,761 sq km), west of England; politically united with England since 1536. The capital is Cardiff. , Scotland, the Channel Islands, and the Isle of Man Noun 1. Isle of Man - one of the British Isles in the Irish Sea
Man

British Isles - Great Britain and Ireland and adjacent islands in the north Atlantic
. Analysis of ribotype patterns was done by using Taxotron (Institut Pasteur, France) software, as previously described (9).

In 1995 and 1996, PHLS confirmed 265 isolates from residents of England and Wales as nontoxigenic C. diphtheriae (Figure 1). The isolates were submitted by 80 laboratories located throughout each country; 28 (35%) were public health laboratories. Each laboratory submitted 1 to 27 isolates. Questionnaires were returned for 236 (89%) isolates. No pharyngeal pharyngeal /pha·ryn·ge·al/ (fah-rin´je-al) pertaining to the pharynx.

pha·ryn·geal or pha·ryn·gal
adj.
Of, relating to, located in, or coming from the pharynx.
 membrane or systemic toxicity was reported. The age range of patients whose isolates were tested was 1 to 87 (median 20) years.

[Figure 1 ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Two hundred forty-seven (93%) isolates were from the throat, ten (4%) from skin lesions Skin Lesions Definition

A skin lesion is a superficial growth or patch of the skin that does not resemble the area surrounding it.
Description

Skin lesions can be grouped into two categories: primary and secondary.
, one from blood, one from a nose swab, and one from bronchial washings; five were from unrecorded sites. Biotype biotype /bio·type/ (bi´o-tip)
1. a group of individuals having the same genotype.

2. any of a number of strains of a species of microorganisms having differentiable physiologic characteristics.
 var gravis accounted for 223 (84%), var mitis for 33(12%), and var belfanti for 9 (3%) isolates.

Of the 247 throat isolates, 238 were obtained as a result of clinical evaluation clinical evaluation Medtalk An evaluation of whether a Pt has symptoms of a disease, is responding to treatment, or is having adverse reactions to therapy  of patients with sore throats, and 9 were obtained from contacts of these patients. Of the 238 isolates obtained during evaluations, more than 25% were from male attendees at general outpatient or genitourinary medicine outpatient clinics (Table 1). Of isolates from females patients, 7% were from general outpatient clinics, and none were from genitourinary medicine outpatient clinics. Most isolates were from 15- to 24-year-old patients (Table 2). Of 238 throat isolates, 29 (12%) were from patients who had traveled outside the United Kingdom in the preceding 3 months, 20 to Western Europe, 4 to Australasia, 2 to Africa, 2 to the Indian subcontinent, and 1 to the Caribbean. Fever, lymphadenopathy lymphadenopathy /lym·phad·e·nop·a·thy/ (-op´ah-the) disease of the lymph nodes.

angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy , angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy with dysproteinemia
, or both were reported in association with 72 (30%) of throat isolates. Nontoxigenic C. diphtheriae was reported as the predominant organism in 171 (72%) of the 238 throat swabs (Table 3) but was mixed with betahemolytic streptococci Streptococcus (plural, streptococci)
A genus of spherical-shaped anaerobic bacteria occurring in pairs or chains. Sydenham's chorea is considered a complication of a streptococcal throat infection.
 in 67 (28%). Penicillin was prescribed for 100 patients and a macrolide for 66, for a total of 166 (70%) patients treated according to current U.K. guidelines (10). Other antibiotics were prescribed for 7 patients and none for the rest. Viral throat cultures, reported for 10 (4%) of the 238 patients, were negative. Positive serologic se·rol·o·gy  
n. pl. se·rol·o·gies
1. The science that deals with the properties and reactions of serums, especially blood serum.

2.
 results for infectious mononucleosis Infectious mononucleosis

A disease of children and young adults, characterized by fever and enlarged lymph nodes and spleen. EB (Epstein-Barr) herpesvirus is the causative agent.
 were reported in 10 (4%) patients. Seven isolates were associated with HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States.  infection, eight with psoriasis, one with gonorrhea gonorrhea (gŏnərē`ə), common infectious disease caused by a bacterium (Neisseria gonorrhoeae), involving chiefly the mucous membranes of the genitourinary tract. , two with malaria, and one with cytomegalovirus infection Cytomegalovirus infection

A common asymptomatic infection caused by cytomegalovirus, which can produce life-threatening illnesses in the immature fetus and in immunologically deficient subjects.
 and Crohn disease. Four of five laboratories referring 10 or more isolates reported that they had screened all throat swabs with selective media for C. diphtheriae during 1995 and 1996. These laboratories were located at two teaching hospitals in central London (25 and 19 isolates) and two public health laboratories, one in the northwest of England (13 isolates) and the other in Wales (10 isolates). These 67 isolates were obtained from screening 32,345 throat swabs during the survey period. This rate corresponds to an overall rate of two isolates per thousand throat swabs (1.2 to 2.9 isolates per thousand throat swabs for each individual laboratory). Of the 10 skin isolates, 2 were vargravis, 7 var mitis, and 1 var belfanti. Nine were associated with travel outside the United Kingdom in the previous 3 months: to Africa (three patients), the Indian subcontinent (one patient), the Caribbean (two patients), and Southeast Asia (three patients). The positive blood culture was biotype var mitis, obtained from a 2-year-old with congenital heart disease congenital heart disease, any defect in the heart present at birth. There is evidence that some congenital heart defects are inherited, but the cause of most cases is unknown.  whose illness was diagnosed as endocarditis endocarditis (ĕn'dōkärdī`tĭs), bacterial or fungal infection of the endocardium (inner lining of the heart) that can be either acute or subacute.  3 weeks after returning from Pakistan. The isolate from the nose was var belfanti mixed with Klebsiella klebsiella

Any of the rod-shaped bacteria that make up the genus Klebsiella. They are gram-negative (see gram stain), thrive better without oxygen than with it, and do not move. K.
 aerogenes, taken from a 23-year-old man of Pakistani origin, who had a 3-month history of rhinitis Rhinitis Definition

Rhinitis is inflammation of the mucous lining of the nose.
Description

Rhinitis is a nonspecific term that covers infections, allergies, and other disorders whose common feature is the location of their symptoms.
 but had not traveled in the preceding 3 months. The isolate from bronchial washings was var belfanti, associated with a malignant lung tumor in a 68-year-old man.

Table 1. English and Welsh
As an adjective "English and Welsh" refers to England and Wales.


English and Welsh is the title of J. R. R. Tolkien's valedictory address to the University of Oxford of 1955, explaining the origin of the word "Welsh".
 patients with sore throats whose throat swabs yielded nontoxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae, by sex, 1995 and 1996
                    Male     Female      Not
                  patients  patients  recorded   Total

Clinical setting  No.    %  No.    %  No.    %  No.    %
General practice   50   52   98   74    3   38  151   63
Outpatients        15   15    9    7    1   13   25   11
GUM clinic(a)      11   11    0    0    1   13   12    5
Inpatients          8    8    6    5    0    0   14    6
Other               2    2    5    4    0    0    7    3
Not recorded       11   11   15   11    3   38   29   12
All settings       97  100  133  100    8  100  238  100


(a) GUM = genitourinary medicine.

Table 2. English and Welsh patients with sore throats whose throat swabs yielded nontoxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae, by age, 1995 and 1996
                                       Age

                     <15      15-24     25-34      35+      All ages

Clinical Setting  No.    %  No.    %  No.    %  No.    %   No.     %
General practice   20   13  103   68   24   16    4    3   151   100
Outpatients         1    4   15   58    7   31    2    8    25   100
GUM clinic(a)       0    0    6   50    4   33    2   17    12   100
Inpatients          4   29    8   57    2   14    0    0    14   100
Other               0    0    2   29    4   57    1   14     7   100
Not recorded        5   17   14   47    8   30    2    7    29   100
All settings       30   13  148   62   49   21   11    5   238   100


(a) GUM = genitourinary medicine.

Table 3. Pathogens in mixed growth with nontoxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae in throat swabs from English and Welsh patients with sore throats, 1995 and 1996
Pathogen                          No.     %
Lancefield Group A streptococci    26    11
Lancefield Group C streptococci    30    13
Lancefield Group G streptococci    11     5
None                              171    72
Total                             238   100


Taxotron analysis was undertaken in 121 (90%) of 135 specimens obtained for isolation from referrals from laboratories in all eight health regions in England and Wales during 1995; 115 of these had been obtained through clinical evaluation and 6 through contact tracing (Table 4). Travel outside the United Kingdom in the preceding 3 months was reported in association with isolates from 17 patients (Tables 4 and 5). Eight additional isolates that had been submitted by laboratories in Scotland, the Channel Islands, and the Isle of Man were ribotyped (Table 4). Twenty-three distinct patterns were detected and were designated A to W (Figure 2 and Tables 4 and 5). Ribotypes A, B, C, and D were biotype gravis; ribotypes E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, and Q were biotype mitis; and ribotypes R, S, T, U, V, and W were biotype belfanti.

[Figure 2 ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Table 4. Throat isolates of nontoxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae submitted to the Public Health Laboratory Service's Streptococcus and Diphtheria Reference Unit, from U.K. residents,(a) 1995
                     Travel outside
                      U.K. within
                        previous
Site of isolate         3 months      No. ribotyped     Ribotypes

Isolates from residents of England and Wales
Throat                     No              96         78A,3B,1C,1D,
                                                      5F,1G,1I,1J,
                                                      1L,1N,10,1P,1T
Throat                    Yes              11         7A,1B,1E,1F,1U
Skin                      Yes               5         1D,1H,1J,1M,1W
Blood                     Yes               1         1Q
Bronchial washings         No               1         1S
Nose                       No               1         1V
Total 115

Isolates from contacts of residents of England and Wales
Throat                     No               6         5A, 1Q
Total                                      121

Isolates from residents of Scotland, Channel Islands, and
Isle of Man
Throat                     No               8         4A,1K,1L,2R
Total U.K.                                 129


(a) U.K. = England, Wales, Scotland, Channel Islands, and Isle of Man

Table 5. Nontoxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae isolates from patients who traveled outside England and Wales in the previous 3 months, submitted to the Public Health Research Laboratory's Streptococcus and Diphtheria Reference Unit, 1995
Residence(a)     Destination     Ribotype    Site

London            Australia         A       Throat
London           Sierra Leone       A       Throat
Northwest           Cyprus          A       Throat
Northwest          Holland          A       Throat
Northwest       Canary Islands      A       Throat
Northwest           Spain           A       Throat
Wales              Germany          A       Throat
London              France          B       Throat
London             Vietnam          D        Skin
London              Gambia          E       Throat
London          Canary Islands      F       Throat
London              Sudan           H        Skin
Southeast        Philippines        J        Skin
London              Ghana           M        Skin
West Midlands      Pakistan         Q       Blood
London             Morocco          U       Throat
West Midlands      Jamaica          W        Skin


(a) English Health Regions and Wales.

Ribotype A was isolated only from the throat and accounted for 90 (74%) of 121 isolates from residents of England and Wales (Table 4). The isolates represented 78 of the 96 throat isolates from specimens obtained during clinical evaluation and not associated with recent travel, 7 of 11 throat isolates taken at investigation and associated with recent travel, and 5 of 6 throat isolates obtained at contact tracing (Tables 4 and 5). Ribotype A also accounted for 4 of 8 throat isolates obtained at investigation from residents of Scotland, the Channel Islands, and Isle of Man (Table 4).

The remaining ribotype strains accounted for one to five isolates and were associated with a single health region or with travel outside the United Kingdom (Tables 4 and 5). Ribotype E was isolated from the throat of one person who had recently traveled to Gambia (Table 5). The five ribotypes from skin isolates were related to travel (Table 5); ribotypes H, M, and W were present in single isolates, while ribotypes D and J were also detected in nontravel-related throat isolates. Ribotype Q was isolated from blood of the 2-year-old with congenital heart disease and from the throat of a 4-year-old sibling. The nose isolate from the 23-year-old patient of Pakistani origin was ribotype V, and that obtained from bronchial washings of the 68-year-old man was ribotype S. All ribotypes from contacts were the same as their index case isolates. Ribotypes A, G, N, Q, P, L, and H formed a cluster with a genetic distance of <0.2, indicating greater than 80% genetic homology. Ribotypes L and H exhibited more than 90% genetic similarity.

Conclusions

One invasive infection with C. diphtheriae was associated with known risk factors. A single case of endocarditis without recognized risk factors was reported in England immediately before the survey (11). This picture is similar to that of an Australian series in which three of seven cases of invasive infection had no predisposing risk factors (12). Most isolates were from throat swabs of young adults in primary care. The preponderance of female patients reflects the pattern of age- and sex-specific consultation rates for acute pharyngitis pharyngitis

Inflammation and infection (usually bacterial or viral) of the pharynx. Symptoms include pain (sore throat, worse on swallowing), redness, swollen lymph nodes, and fever.
 and tonsillitis tonsillitis

Inflammatory infection of the tonsils, usually with hemolytic streptococci (see streptococcus) or viruses. The symptoms are sore throat, trouble in swallowing, fever, and enlarged lymph nodes on the neck.
 (ICD ICD International Classification of Diseases (of the World Health Organization); intrauterine contraceptive device.

ICD
abbr.
 9th Revision codes 462 and 463) seen in general practice (13). Men attending genitourinary medicine clinics accounted for 5% of throat isolates, but there were no isolates in female patients from such settings. This is consistent with clustering previously noted in gay men but could be due to laboratory practice in hospitals serving large gay populations.

It is not known whether nontoxigenic C. diphtheriae strains were responsible for the illnesses that prompted the study. More than 25% of the 238 throat isolates obtained at investigation of sore throats were associated with beta-hemolytic streptococcal infection Streptococcal infection
An infection caused by a pathogenic bacteria of one of several species of the genus streptococcus or their toxins. Almost any organ in the body may be involved.

Mentioned in: Fracture Repair
, infectious mononucleosis, or another illness; negative results for viral culture viral culture A test in which a specimen–eg, throat swab, sputum, stool, CSF, urine, from a Pt is placed in live cells; various viruses–eg, adenovirus, enterovirus, herpes simplex, measles, mumps, myxovirus, paramyxovirus, rhinovirus, rubella,  of the throat and for infectious mononucleosis were reported in a small proportion of the remainder. Community-based carriage studies and case-control studies, supported by comprehensive virologic investigation, will be required to obtain more complete information on the pathogenicity or copathogenicity of nontoxigenic C. diphtheriae in throat isolates.

Current U.K. guidelines state that when identified, nontoxigenic C. diphtheriae be regarded as a potential pathogen and be treated with penicillin or erythromycin erythromycin (ĭrĭth'rōmī`sĭn), any of several related antibiotic drugs produced by bacteria of the genus Streptomyces (see antibiotic).  if the patient has symptoms (10). Treatment was generally in accordance with these guidelines, but contact tracing, undertaken in 68 (26%) patients, and administration of a diphtheria immunization immunization: see immunity; vaccination.  booster to 18 (8%) patients were not recommended. The few nontoxigenic C. diphtheriae isolates associated with chronic skin ulcers were mainly associated with recent travel to tropical zones.

A total of 23 distinct ribotypes were observed. However, ribotype A accounted for most isolates, was isolated exclusively from the throat, and was detected in isolates obtained throughout the United Kingdom. Seven of eleven throat isolates associated with a recent history of travel were also ribotype A, and it is possible that these were acquired in the U.K. Ribotype A predominated and appeared to circulate freely within the U.K. in 1995, which suggests that this strain may have some advantage in terms of transmissibility trans·mis·si·ble  
adj.
That can be transmitted: transmissible signals.



trans·mis
 or pathogenic potential.

If nontoxigenic strains of C. diptheriae vary in factors associated with increased transmissibility of pathogenic potential, toxigenic strains may also vary in these factors. Toxigenic strains with these factors could be more likely than toxigenic strains without these factors to produce epidemics. This type of relationship may explain the appearance of an epidemic clone in the Russian diphtheria epidemic of the 1990s.

The marked variation in number of nontoxigenic C. diphtheriae isolates referred by laboratories in different regions probably reflected differences in the use of selective culture media for C. diphtheriae and practice in referral of isolates to PHLS. Increased professional awareness of the risk for imported diphtheria during the 1990s would have been expected to have increased both of these factors and may explain most, if not all, of the increase in the number of nontoxigenic C. diphtheriae isolates ascertained by the PHLS Streptococcus and Diphtheria Reference Unit during this period (Figure 1).

It has been suggested that nontoxigenic strains could become toxigenic by acquiring the tox gene, assuming that the chromosomal diphtheria toxin diphtheria toxin Infectious disease A 62 kD protein responsible for C diphtheriae's cardiotoxic and neurotoxic effects, and mucosal damage. See Corynebacterium diphtheriae, Diphtheria.  repressor gene repressor gene
n.
A gene that prevents transcription of a nonallele.
 (dtxR) is functional (14-16). However, no reports of membrane or systemic toxicity were received for any of our isolates, and ribotype patterns in the U.K. isolates for toxigenic and nontoxigenic strains differed. The rise in nontoxigenic strains from 1985 to 1996 and thereafter has not been accompanied by a rise in toxigenic isolates (Figure 1). These observations suggest that conversion to toxin production had not occurred despite continuing circulation of nontoxigenic strains. However, documented introductions of toxigenic C. diphtheriae into the U.K. are extremely rare.

Results from the four laboratories that routinely screen all throat isolates with selective culture media indicated a low isolation rate. This may not be seen as a cost-effective activity by many laboratories; less biased and cost-effective surveillance data could be obtained by undertaking selective culture for C. diphtheriae in population-based samples, accompanied by strict compliance with reporting.

Our data confirm the known association of nontoxigenic strains with localized disease localized disease Medtalk Any condition, generally understood as malignant, which is confined to a tissue or organ. Cf Regional disease.  and with occasional cases of invasive infection, particularly endocarditis. There was no evidence that nontoxigenic C. diphtheriae would have posed an increasing threat to public health in England and Wales during the survey period.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to colleagues in England and Wales for referring isolates, completing enhanced surveillance questionnaires, and providing information on laboratory workload; and to the staff of the PHLS Streptococcus and Diphtheria Reference Unit.

Dr. Reacher is consultant medical epidemiologist at the Public Health Laboratory Service Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre in London. His current responsibilities are national surveillance for bacteremia bacteremia: see septicemia.
bacteremia

Presence of bacteria in the blood. Short-term bacteremia follows dental or surgical procedures, especially if local infection or very high-risk surgery releases bacteria from isolated sites.
 and associated antibiotic resistance antibiotic resistance,
n the ability of certain strains of microorganisms to develop resistance to antibiotics.

antibiotic resistance 
, gastrointestinal infections, and training.

References

(1.)Wilson APR APR

See: Annual Percentage Rate
, Efstratiou A, Weaver E, Allason-Jones E, Bingham J, Ridgway GL, et al. Unusual non-toxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae in homosexual men. Lancet 1992;339:998.

(2.) Efstratiou A, George R, Begg NT. Non-toxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae var gravis in England. Lancet 1993;341:1592-3.

(3.) Wilson APR. The return of Corynebacterium diphtheriae: the rise of non-toxigenic strains. J Hosp Infect 1995;30 Suppl: 306-12.

(4.) Efstratiou A, George RC. Microbiology and epidemiology of diphtheria. Reviews in Medical Microbiology 1996;7:31-42.

(5.) Efstratiou A, Maple PAC. Manual for the laboratory diagnosis of diphtheria. Copenhagen: World Health Organisation; 1994:ICP/EPI 038 (C).

(6.) Efstratiou A, George RC. Laboratory guidelines for the diagnosis of infections caused by Corynebacterium diphtheriae and C. ulcerans. Commun Dis Public Health 1999;2:250-7.

(7.) Public Health Laboratory Service. PHLS clinical microbiological standard operating procedure standard operating procedure Medtalk A technique, method or therapy performed 'by the book,' using a standard protocol meeting internally or externally defined criteria; a formal, written procedure that describes how specific lab operations are to be performed.  for the investigation of throat swabs. London: Technical Services, Public Health Laboratory Service Headquarters; 1996. SOP 9: issue 2.

(8.)Enhanced surveillance of non-toxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae infections. Comm Dis Rep CDR (1) See CD-R and extension.

(2) (Call Detail Reporting) See call accounting.

(3) (Common Data Rate) A standard sampling rate for digital video for 480i and 576i systems. The rate is 13.5 MHz. See ITU-R BT.
 Wkly 1996;6:29.

(9.) De Zoysa A, Efstratiou A, George RC, Jahkola M, Vuopio-Varkila J, Deshevoi S, et al. Molecular epidemiology molecular epidemiology Molecular medicine An evolving field that combines the tools of standard epidemiology–case studies, questionnaires and monitoring of exposure to external factors with the tools of molecular biology–eg, restriction endonucleases,  of Corynebacterium diphtheriae from northwestern Russia and surrounding countries studied by using ribotyping and pulsed field gel electrophoresis Historical Background
Standard gel electrophoresis techniques for separation of DNA molecules provided huge advantages for molecular biology research. However, many limitations existed with the standard protocol in that it was unable to separate very large molecules of DNA
. J Clin Microbiol 1995;33:1080-3.

(10.) Bonnet JM, Begg NT. Control of diphtheria: guidance for consultants in communicable disease control. Commun Dis Public Health 1999;2:242-9.

(11.) Booth LV, Ellis C, Wale wale
n.
A mark raised on the skin, as by a whip; a weal or welt.

v.
To raise marks on the skin, as by whipping.
 MC, Vyas S, Lowes JA. An atypical case of Corynebacterium diphtheriae endocarditis and subsequent outbreak control measures. J Infect 1995;31:63-5.

(12.) Tiley SM, Kokiuba KR, Heron LG, Munro R. Infective endocarditis infective endocarditis
n.
See infectious endocarditis.


infective endocarditis Acute endocarditis; bacterial endocarditis; subacute endocarditis Cardiology An infection of the endocardium which may involve the valves
 due to nontoxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae: report of seven cases and review. Clin Infect Dis 1993;16:271-5.

(13.) McCormick A, Fleming D, Charlton J. Morbidity statistics from General Practice: Fourth national survey 1991-1992. London: Office of Population, Census and Surveys. Her Majesty's Stationery Office; 1995: p. 250.

(14.) Pappenheimer AM, Murphy JR. Studies on the molecular epidemiology of diphtheria. Lancet 1983;ii:923-6.

(15.) Groman NB, Cianciotto N, Bjorn M, Rabin M. Detection and expression of DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 homologous to the tox gene in nontoxigenic isolates of Corynebacterium diphtheriae. Infect Immun 1983;42:48-56.

(16.) Cianciotto NP, Groman NB. Characterization of bacteriophages from tox-containing, non-toxigenic isolates of Corynebacterium diphtheriae. Microb Pathog 1997;22:343-51.

Address for correspondence: M. Reacher, Public Health Laboratory Service, Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre, 61 Colindale Avenue, London NW9 5EQ, U.K.; fax: 44-0-20-8200-7868; e-mail: mreacher@phls.org.uk.

Mark Reacher,(*) Mary Ramsay,(*) Joanne White,(*) Aruni De Zoysa,(*) Androulla Efstratiou,(*) Gina Mann,(*) Andrew Mackay,([dagger]) and Robert C. George(*)

(*) Public Health Laboratory Service, London, United Kingdom; ([dagger]) Greenwich District General Hospital, Vanbrugh Hill, London, United Kingdom
COPYRIGHT 2000 U.S. National Center for Infectious Diseases
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2000, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:George, Robert C.
Publication:Emerging Infectious Diseases
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Date:Nov 1, 2000
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Cluster of invasive infections, including endocarditis, caused by nontoxigenic Corynebacterium diphtheriae.(Letter to the editor)

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