Untitled Document
Tetanus is a serious disease caused by a bacterial toxin that affects your nervous system, leading to painful muscle contractions, particularly of your jaw and neck muscles. Tetanus can interfere with your ability to breathe and can threaten your life. Tetanus is commonly known as "lockjaw."
Thanks to the tetanus vaccine, cases of tetanus are rare in the United States and other parts of the developed world. But the disease remains a threat to those who aren't up to date on their vaccinations. It's more common in developing countries.
There's no cure for tetanus. Treatment focuses on managing complications until the effects of the tetanus toxin resolve.
Symptoms
Signs and symptoms of tetanus appear anytime from a few days to several weeks after tetanus bacteria enter your body through a wound. The average incubation period is seven to 10 days.
Common signs and symptoms of tetanus include:
- • Spasms and stiffness in your jaw muscles (trismus)
- • Stiffness of your neck muscles
- • Difficulty swallowing
- • Stiffness of your abdominal muscles
- • Painful body spasms lasting for several minutes, typically triggered by minor occurrences, such as a draft, loud noise, physical touch or light
Possible other signs and symptoms include:
- • Fever
- • Sweating
- • Elevated blood pressure
- • Rapid heart rate
When to see a doctor
See your doctor for a tetanus booster shot if you haven't had a booster shot within the past 10 years, or you have a deep or dirty wound and you haven't had a booster shot in five years. If you aren't sure of when you received your last booster, get a booster.
Causes
Tetanus is caused by a toxin made by spores of bacteria, Clostridium tetani, found in soil, dust and animal feces. When the spores enter a deep flesh wound, they grow into bacteria that can produce a powerful toxin, tetanospasmin. The toxin impairs the nerves that control your muscles (motor neurons). The toxin can cause muscle stiffness and spasms — the major signs and symptoms of tetanus.
Nearly all cases of tetanus occur in people who have never been vaccinated or in adults who haven't kept up with their 10-year booster shots. You can't catch tetanus from a person who has it.
Risk factors
The following increase your likelihood of getting tetanus:
- • Failure to get vaccinated or to keep up to date with booster shots against tetanus
- • An injury that lets tetanus spores into the wound
- • A foreign body, such as a nail or splinter
Tetanus cases have developed from the following:
- • Puncture wounds — including from splinters, body piercings, tattoos and injection drugs
- • Gunshot wounds
- • Compound fractures
- • Burns
- • Surgical wounds
- • Injection drug use
- • Animal or insect bites
- • Infected foot ulcers
- • Dental infections
- • Infected umbilical stumps in newborns born of inadequately vaccinated mothers
Complications
Once tetanus toxin has bonded to your nerve endings it is impossible to remove. Complete recovery from a tetanus infection requires new nerve endings to grow, which can take up to several months.
Complications of tetanus infection may include:
- Broken bones. The severity of spasms may cause the spine and other bones to break.
- Blockage of a lung artery (pulmonary embolism). A blood clot that has traveled from elsewhere in your body can block the main artery of the lung or one of its branches.
- Death. Severe tetanus-induced (tetanic) muscle spasms can interfere with or stop your breathing. Respiratory failure is the most common cause of death. Lack of oxygen may also induce cardiac arrest and death. Pneumonia is another cause of death.
Prevention
You can easily prevent tetanus by being vaccinated.
The primary vaccine series
The tetanus vaccine usually is given to children as part of the diphtheria and tetanus toxoids and acellular pertussis (DTaP) vaccine. This vaccination provides protection against three diseases: a throat and respiratory infection (diphtheria), whooping cough (pertussis) and tetanus.
The DTaP vaccine is a series of five shots, typically given in the arm or thigh to children at ages:
- • 2 months
- • 4 months
- • 6 months
- • 15 to 18 months
- • 4 to 6 years
The booster
A booster of the tetanus vaccine is typically given in combination with a booster of diphtheria vaccine (Td). In 2005, a tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis (Tdap) vaccine was approved for use in teens and adults under age 65 to ensure continuing protection against pertussis, too.
It's recommended that adolescents get a dose of Tdap, preferably between the ages of 11 and 12, and a Td booster every 10 years thereafter. If you've never received a dose of Tdap, substitute it for your next Td booster dose and then continue with Td boosters.
If you're traveling internationally, particularly to a developing country where tetanus might be common, make sure your immunity is current.
To stay up to date with all of your vaccinations, ask your doctor to review your vaccination status regularly.
If you weren't vaccinated against tetanus as a child, see your doctor about getting the Tdap vaccine.
Diagnosis
Doctors diagnose tetanus based on a physical exam, medical and immunization history, and the signs and symptoms of muscle spasms, stiffness and pain. Laboratory tests generally aren't helpful for diagnosing tetanus.
Treatment
There's no cure for tetanus. Treatment consists of wound care, medications to ease symptoms and supportive care.
Wound care
It's essential to clean the wound to prevent the growth of tetanus spores. This involves removing dirt, foreign objects and dead tissue from the wound.
Medications
- Antitoxin. Your doctor may give you a tetanus antitoxin, such as tetanus immune globulin. However, the antitoxin can neutralize only toxin that hasn't yet bonded to nerve tissue.
- Antibiotics. Your doctor may also give you antibiotics, either orally or by injection, to fight tetanus bacteria.
- Vaccine. All people with tetanus should receive the tetanus vaccine as soon as they're diagnosed with the condition.
- Sedatives. Doctors generally use powerful sedatives to control muscle spasms.
- Other drugs. Other medications, such as magnesium sulfate and certain beta blockers, might be used to regulate involuntary muscle activity, such as your heartbeat and breathing. Morphine might be used for this purpose as well as sedation.
Supportive therapies
If you have a severe tetanus infection, you'll often need to stay in an intensive care setting. Since sedatives can inhibit breathing, you might temporarily need a ventilator.
Lifestyle and home remedies
Puncture wounds or other deep cuts, animal bites, or particularly dirty wounds put you at increased risk of tetanus infection. Get medical attention if the wound is deep and dirty, particularly if you're unsure of when you were last vaccinated. Leave unclean wounds open to avoid trapping bacteria in the wound with a bandage.
Your doctor may need to clean the wound, prescribe an antibiotic and give you a booster shot of the tetanus toxoid vaccine. If you've previously been vaccinated, your body should quickly make the needed antibodies to protect you against tetanus.
If you have a minor wound, these steps will help prevent tetanus:
- Control bleeding. Apply direct pressure to control bleeding.
- Keep the wound clean. After the bleeding stops, rinse the wound thoroughly with clean running water. Clean the area around the wound with soap and a washcloth. If something is embedded in a wound, see your doctor.
-
Use antibiotics. After you clean the wound, apply a thin layer of an antibiotic cream or ointment. These antibiotics won't make the wound heal faster, but they can discourage bacterial growth and infection.
Certain ingredients in some ointments can cause a mild rash in some people. If a rash appears, stop using the ointment.
- Cover the wound. Exposure to the air might speed healing, but bandages can keep the wound clean and keep harmful bacteria out. Blisters that are draining are vulnerable. Keep them covered until a scab forms.
- Change the dressing. Apply a new dressing at least once a day or whenever the dressing becomes wet or dirty to help prevent infection. If you're allergic to the adhesive used in most bandages, switch to adhesive-free dressings or sterile gauze and paper tape.