Tetanus (Lockjaw)
Tetanus is a vaccine-preventable disease caused by the bacterium Clostridium
tetani, which releases toxin that affects the brain and
spinal cord. The bacteria live in the soil and are found worldwide.
The organism is a harmless inhabitant in the intestines and feces
of horses, sheep, cattle, dogs, cats, rats, guinea pigs, and
chickens. In the soil, they can remain infectious for more than
40 years. The disease is characterized by generalized rigidity
and convulsive spasms of skeletal muscles. Tetanus is not communicable
from person to person.
Infection begins when the bacteria are introduced into an open
injury or wound where they produce a toxin called tetanospasmin.
Tetanospasmin blocks messages from the spinal cord to the muscles,
forcing muscles to go into severe spasm. Tetanus often begins with
mild spasms in the jaw muscles, neck muscles, and facial muscles.
Stiffness rapidly develops in the chest, back, and abdominal muscles.
Tetanus is usually associated with stepping on rusty nails or metal.
Chances are if the object is rusty, it is also dirty. It is not
the rust but the dirt on the nails or metal that carries the bacteria
and causes the infection.
About 100 cases and approximately five deaths of tetanus occur
every year in the U.S., the vast majority in unimmunized individuals
or those who do not have current immunizations. Worldwide, there
are 1 million cases annually. In developing countries, tetanus
frequently causes death in newborn infants when the umbilical stump
becomes infected.
Symptoms for tetanus usually appear within two weeks of infection
and may include:
- Spasms and tightening of the jaw muscle or "lockjaw"
- Stiffness and spasms of muscles
Neck muscles
Chest muscles
Abdominal muscles
Back muscles, often causing arching
- Seizures
- Irritability
- Fever
- Excessive sweating
- Difficulty swallowing
Without treatment, one out of three affected people dies. The
mortality rate for newborns with untreated tetanus is even higher:
two out of three. With proper treatment, less than 10 percent of
infected patients die, but the muscle spasms make for a long recovery.
Tetanus is completely preventable with tetanus immunization. Children
six weeks through six years of age should be given tetanus immunization
in combination with diphtheria and pertussis vaccines (DTaP). A
tetanus/diphtheria (Td) or tetanus/diphtheria/pertussis (Tdap)
booster follows five to ten years later, followed by a booster
every ten years throughout life.
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