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Cutaneous Ulcers in a Returning Traveller: a Rare Case of Imported Diphtheria in the UK

Overview
Specialty Dermatology
Date 2015 Oct 13
PMID 26455435
Citations 4
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Abstract

We describe a case of cutaneous diphtheria in the UK, presenting as lower leg ulcers in a returning traveller, and discuss the epidemiology, significance and public health implications of this disease and the therapeutic options available. A 65-year-old woman presented with a 6-week history of multiple ulcers appearing on her legs following a holiday in Kenya. Culture of biopsy tissue grew Corynebacterium diphtheriae. A cascade of therapeutic and public health interventions followed, many of which were terminated once the isolate was confirmed as nontoxigenic. Cutaneous diphtheria is a rare, notifiable disease in the UK, but is common in tropical countries, and is most often seen in the West as a traveller's disease. Corynebacteria are common skin commensals, and without appropriate clinical details, laboratories may not recognize C. diphtheriae/Corynebacterium ulcerans. This is likely to have led to under-reporting and under-recognition of the condition.

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