Emergency War Surgery NATO Handbook: Part II: Response of the Body to Wounding:
Chapter XI: Infection
Tetanus
United States Department of Defense
Tetanus is a severe infection caused by Clostridium tetani and its toxin's
effects on the nervous system. It carries a mortality rate of approximately 50%. In an
analysis of Vietnam War wound infections, no cases of tetanus were reported. The infection
is characterized by local and general convulsive spasms of the voluntary muscles. Clostridium
tetani is a strict anaerobe which exists in spore form in the soil and in the
intestines of animals and man. Local necrosis and ischemia provide the conditions
necessary for contaminating spores to evolve into their vegetative form and multiply
rapidly at the site of infection. Once the vegetative forms have begun to multiply, large
amounts of tetanus toxin are produced.
The incubation period is usually 6-12 days but may vary from 4-21 days or longer. In
any event, the incubation period is sufficiently long to prevent the development of
tetanus in war wounds if proper prophylaxis is employed within a day or two of injury.
Small, deep puncture wounds that often appear trivial are important sources of this
infection and must be considered prone to tetanus. Early clinical manifestations may be of
a general nature, such as irritability, insomnia, muscular tremors, local spasm, or
rigidity in the muscle near the wound. Trismus is usually the first symptom. Sore throat,
painful dysphagia, stiff neck, and difficulty in beginning micturition may be early
evidence of muscular irritability. The dental officer may be the first to see the patient
if trismus has been mistaken for some oral condition.
Trismus and risus sardonicus resulting from spasm of the masseters and muscles of the
face are signs of established tetanus. Arching of the spine (opisthotonos) and respiratory
difficulty from laryngeal and intercostal muscle spasm may also be present. The
contractions are aggravated by additional spasms whenever any sensory excitation occurs.
Usually reflex spasms are brought on by external stimuli, such as moving the patient or
striking the bed, but later they occur spontaneously at regular and increasingly frequent
intervals until the height of disease is reached. Spasms often begin with a sudden jerk.
Every muscle in the body is thrown into intense tonic contraction; the jaws are tightly
clenched, the head is retracted, the back is arched, the chest and abdomen are fixed, and
the limbs are usually extended. A severe spasm may result in respiratory arrest. Spasms
may last a few seconds or several minutes. When spasms occur frequently, they lead to
rapid exhaustion and sometimes to death from asphyxiation. Without spasms, mortality is
low. Few patients with severe spasms survive.
Cephalic tetanus is a form of tetanus in which irritation or paralysis of cranial
nerves appears early and dominates the picture. The facial nerve is affected most often.
Ophthalmoplegia from involvement of the ocular nerves may develop. Trismus and dysphagia
may also follow wounds of the head and face, and the symptoms often appear first on the
injured side.
Severe tetanus is often fatal, but those who recover do so completely without sequelae.
The patient who has survived tetanus is not immune and, unless immunized, is susceptible
to a second attack. Recurrent tetanus in the same patient has been reported. Apparently a
sublethal amount of tetanus toxin is not sufficient to provide an adequate antigenic
stimulus for production of active immunity.
The diagnosis of tetanus is a clinical one, with bacteriological confirmation sometimes
possible. The morphologic appearance of the organism in stained smears (the so-called
tennis racket terminal spore in Gram-positive bacillus) usually is not sufficient to
differentiate Clostridium tetani from other anaerobes with terminal spores. The
disease proceeds with fever, sweating, and oliguria while the mind remains clear. Death
usually occurs as a result of respiratory arrest during painful generalized convulsions.
Toxemia, pneumonia secondary to aspiration, hyperpyrexia, and cardiac failure are other
causes of death.
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Operational Medicine 2001
Health Care in Military Settings
Bureau of Medicine and Surgery
Department of the Navy
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Washington, D.C
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Operational Medicine
Health Care in Military Settings
CAPT Michael John Hughey, MC, USNR
NAVMED P-5139
January 1, 2001 |
United States Special Operations Command
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MacDill AFB, Florida
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