Paediatrics II
Tetanus
Table of Contents
Tetanus Neonatorum (Neonatal Tetanus)
Tetanus neonatorum, also known as neonatal tetanus, is an acute, life-threatening, non-communicable bacterial disease caused by Clostridium tetani. It is characterized by generalized muscle rigidity, painful spasms, and autonomic instability. The condition manifests between 3 and 28 days of life, with the majority of cases appearing between days 6 and 8 (mean incubation period: 7 days). It results from infection of the umbilical stump, leading to systemic absorption of tetanospasmin toxin.
Causative Organism
- Clostridium tetani
- Gram-positive, anaerobic, spore-forming rod
- Produces two toxins:
- Tetanospasmin (neurotoxin): Responsible for clinical disease
- Tetanolysin (hemolysin): Minor role, damages local tissue
- Spores are highly resistant to heat, desiccation, and disinfectants
- Found in soil, dust, animal feces, and rusty objects
Pathophysiology
- Entry: Spores enter through the umbilical stump during unhygienic cord cutting or application of contaminated substances (e.g., dung, ash, ghee, herbal pastes).
- Germination: In anaerobic, necrotic tissue (devitalized cord), spores germinate into vegetative bacteria.
- Toxin Production: Tetanospasmin is released → travels retrogradely along motor neurons to the spinal cord and brainstem.
- Mechanism of Action:
- Binds irreversibly to presynaptic terminals of inhibitory interneurons
- Blocks release of glycine and GABA
- Results in disinhibition of motor neurons → uncontrolled muscle contraction
- Affects autonomic nervous system → labile blood pressure, tachycardia
- No Immunity: No person-to-person transmission; no herd immunity
Epidemiology
- Global Burden:
- WHO estimates ~25,000 neonatal deaths annually (2020)
- Eliminated in >100 countries; persists in low-resource settings
- High-Risk Areas: Rural, poor sanitation, low TT coverage
- Elimination Goal: <1 case per 1,000 live births per district (WHO)
Risk Factors
- Maternal Factors
- No or incomplete tetanus toxoid (TT) vaccination
- Home delivery without trained birth attendant
- Previous child with neonatal tetanus
- Delivery & Cord Care
- Unsterile cord cutting instruments (bamboo, knife, sickle)
- Application of traditional substances (cow dung, soil, turmeric, oil)
- Delayed cord separation
- Socioeconomic
- Poverty, illiteracy, cultural practices
- Lack of access to clean delivery kits
Clinical Stages and Presentation
| Stage | Time Frame | Clinical Features |
|---|---|---|
| Incubation Period | 3–14 days (mean 7) | Asymptomatic; normal feeding/sucking |
| Stage 1: Prodromal | Day 1 of symptoms | – Poor sucking or refusal to feed – Irritability – Excessive crying – Mild facial grimacing |
| Stage 2: Spasmodic | Day 2–3 | – Trismus (lockjaw): Inability to open mouth – Risus sardonicus: Spastic smile – Opisthotonos: Arched back – Rigid abdomen and limbs – Spasms triggered by touch, light, sound |
| Stage 3: Severe | Day 3–7 | – Generalized tonic-clonic spasms (every few minutes) – Laryngospasm → apnea, cyanosis – Autonomic dysfunction: tachycardia, hypertension, sweating – High fever (from muscle activity) |
| Complications | Variable | – Aspiration pneumonia – Rib fractures – Rhabdomyolysis – Pulmonary embolism – Sepsis (secondary infection) – Sudden cardiac arrest |
Diagnosis
- Primarily Clinical
- History of unhygienic cord care + onset of spasms in first 2 weeks
- Spatula Test: Touch posterior pharynx with spatula → jaw clenches (positive in tetanus) vs. gag reflex (normal)
- No Laboratory Confirmation
- Toxin not detectable in serum or CSF
- Wound culture rarely positive
- Differential Diagnosis
- Hypocalcemic tetany
- Meningitis/encephalitis
- Strychnine poisoning
- Drug withdrawal (opioids)
- Seizure disorder
Management Workflow
1. Immediate Actions (First Hour)
- Isolate in quiet, dark, draft-free room
- Minimize stimulation (no unnecessary touch, dim lights, silence)
- Airway protection: Suction, position on side
- IV access (avoid IM injections during spasms)
- Oxygen if cyanosed
- Nasogastric tube (for feeding and drug administration)
2. Neutralize Circulating Toxin
- Human Tetanus Immunoglobulin (HTIG)
- Dose: 3,000–6,000 IU IM (single dose)
- Inject 500 IU around umbilical wound, rest in contralateral thigh
- Equine TIG (if HTIG unavailable): 10,000–20,000 IU (risk of anaphylaxis → test dose)
3. Eradicate Source of Infection
- Wound Care
- Clean umbilical stump with chlorhexidine 7.1% or hydrogen peroxide
- Debride necrotic tissue if present
- Leave open to air
- Antibiotics
- Metronidazole IV (first choice):
- 7.5 mg/kg/dose every 6–8 hours × 10–14 days
- Penicillin G IV:
- 100,000 IU/kg/day in 4 divided doses × 10–14 days
- Avoid aminoglycosides (no anaerobic coverage)
- Metronidazole IV (first choice):
4. Control Muscle Spasms
- Benzodiazepines
- Diazepam IV: 0.1–0.3 mg/kg slowly every 3–6 hours
- Midazolam infusion (if frequent spasms): 0.1–0.3 mg/kg/hr
- Magnesium Sulfate (second-line, with monitoring)
- Loading: 0.2 mmol/kg IV over 30 min
- Maintenance: 0.08–0.1 mmol/kg/hr
- Monitor patellar reflex, serum Mg²⁺
- Severe/Refractory Cases
- Muscle relaxants: Vecuronium or Pancuronium
- Mechanical ventilation in ICU
- Intrathecal baclofen (rarely used)
5. Supportive Care
- Nutrition
- NGT feeding: Expressed breast milk (EBM)
- Start 10–20 ml/kg/feed every 2–3 hours
- TPN if prolonged intubation
- Hydration
- IV fluids: D5½NS or D10½NS
- Avoid overhydration (risk of SIADH)
- Autonomic Instability
- Labetalol or Morphine for tachycardia/hypertension
- Atropine for bradycardia
- Fever Control
- Tepid sponging, paracetamol (avoid aspirin)
6. Monitoring
- Continuous cardiorespiratory monitor
- Hourly BP, HR, SpO₂ initially
- Daily weight, input/output
- Watch for laryngospasm, apnea
Prognosis
- With Intensive Care: Mortality 10–20%
- Without Treatment: Mortality >80%
- Poor Prognostic Signs
- Incubation <5 days
- Onset of spasms <48 hrs after first symptom
- Spasms within 24 hrs of admission
- Temperature >40°C
- Survivors: Usually full neurological recovery if treated early
Prevention Strategies
1. Maternal Immunization
- Tetanus Toxoid (TT) Schedule
- TT1: First contact in pregnancy
- TT2: 4 weeks after TT1
- TT3: 6 months after TT2
- TT4 & TT5: Annual boosters (5 doses = lifelong protection)
- Protection:
- 2 doses → 80–90% infant protection
- 3+ doses → >95% protection
2. Clean Delivery Practices
- Six Cleans (WHO):
- Clean hands
- Clean perineum
- Clean surface
- Clean cord cutting tool
- Clean cord tie
- Clean cloth for drying
- Use sterilized blade/scissors
- Chlorhexidine 7.1% for cord cleansing (reduces infection by 50%)
3. Clean Cord Care
- Dry cord care (WHO recommendation in low-risk settings)
- Chlorhexidine in high-risk areas
- Avoid dung, ash, oil, herbs, mud
4. Health Education
- Train traditional birth attendants (TBAs)
- Community awareness on dangers of harmful practices
- Promote facility delivery
5. Surveillance & Response
- Report all cases to district health office
- Investigate delivery practices
- Offer TT to unimmunized mothers in community
WHO Classification of Neonatal Tetanus
| Grade | Features |
|---|---|
| Mild | Trismus, spasms infrequent, no respiratory distress |
| Moderate | Frequent spasms, dysphagia, respiratory embarrassment |
| Severe | Spasms every 5–10 min, apnea, cyanosis, autonomic storms |
Key Nursing Responsibilities
- Handle infant gently to avoid triggering spasms
- Administer medications via NGT if IV not possible
- Record spasm frequency, duration, triggers
- Educate mother on TT vaccination for future pregnancies
- Ensure follow-up immunization (DPT at 6, 10, 14 weeks)
Critical Note: Neonatal tetanus is 100% preventable with maternal TT vaccination and clean delivery/cord care. Every case represents a failure of the health system.
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