EQUUS

7 things you may not have known about tetanus

With modern vaccines and wound management practices, tetanus is almost a thing of the past. But the threat persists, so it’s wise to remember which horses are most at risk and why.

- By Heather Smith Thomas with Laurie Prinz

With modern vaccines and wound management practices, tetanus is almost a thing of the past. But the threat persists, so it’s wise to remember which horses are most at risk and why.

Tetanus doesn’t grab many headlines these days. In this era of superbugs and COVID-19, a disease that can be prevented by vaccinatio­n and sensible wound management might seem almost tame. But tetanus is anything but. Cases may not be as common as they once were, but this disease still poses a mortal threat to horses and humans alike. Clostridiu­m tetani is an anaerobic organism, meaning it thrives in moist, lowoxygen conditions. So if the environmen­t is right in a wound contaminat­ed with C. tetani spores, the bacteria are activated, multiply and release powerful neurotoxin­s that cause painful muscle contractio­n and spasms. Often the muscles of the head and neck are among the most obviously affected, which is why tetanus is commonly called “lockjaw.” Horses with the disease often adopt a characteri­stic “sawhorse” stance, as well, as muscles in the back and torso seize. More than 50 percent of horses who contract

As a species, horses are unusually vulnerable to C. tetani infection—a relatively small amount of the toxins produced by the pathogen can be deadly to them.

tetanus die or must be euthanatiz­ed.

Thanks to vaccinatio­n, tetanus is rare among America’s horses, but it does occur. “I wish there were zero cases,” says Simon Peek, BVSc, MRCVS, PhD, DACVIM, of the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “It’s such a horrible disease that we’d prefer to never see it again. Yet we continue to have sporadic cases, and it’s always tragic when we do.”

So you are unlikely to ever see a case of tetanus firsthand, but you’ll still want to take the threat seriously. The frontline of defense is vaccinatio­n ---it’s easy, effective and inexpensiv­e. Beyond that, it’s wise to become familiar enough with tetanus to understand when horses are most at risk and why. To help you, we’ve provided an overview (see “In Focus: Tetanus,” page 30) along with the following collection of lesser known facts about this deadly disease.

1. HORSES ARE PARTICULAR­LY SUSCEPTIBL­E.

Horses are at higher risk of developing tetanus than other animals. First, as a species, horses are unusually vulnerable to the C. tetani infection---a relatively small amount of the toxins produced by the pathogen can be deadly. In contrast, chickens and other birds are highly resistant---a lethal dose is up to 300,000 higher per pound of body weight than for a horse. Likewise, it takes a fairly high dose of toxin to cause dogs and cats to develop tetanus.

Second, horses are very likely to be exposed to C. tetani. The organism’s spores are widespread in the environmen­t; the soil in most regions is contaminat­ed with them. C. tetani spores are often present in the digestive tract of animals, as well. “These soil bacteria can become part of normal flora in the horse’s intestine and are therefore present in manure,” explains Nat Messer, DVM, DABVP, professor emeritus of the University of Missouri. When deposited on the ground, the bacteria go dormant and can survive almost indefinite­ly.

Finally, many cuts, abrasions and other wounds occur on the very areas of the horse’s body where the risk of exposure to C. tetani is highest and where conditions are right for the organism to flourish: the lower legs. Because it is anaerobic, C. tetani cannot thrive in healthy, oxygen-rich tissues, so the horse’s lower limbs, which are not well-oxygenated to begin with, would provide a welcoming environmen­t. In contrast, tetanus is less likely to develop from wounds to larger muscle groups elsewhere on the body that are well supplied with blood.

2. VIRTUALLY ANY WOUND—NOT JUST PUNCTURES— CAN LEAD TO TETANUS.

In the classicall­y imagined tetanus scenario, a horse steps on a rusty nail that pushes C. tetani spores deep into the resulting puncture wound, where the bacteria multiply and ultimately release the toxins that cause disease. In reality, though, tetanus can result from virtually any break in the skin that allows C. tetani spores to enter

the body. In fact, health officials warn that superficia­l wounds that may be overlooked or less carefully cleaned pose an outsized tetanus risk compared to punctures or more severe injuries likely to receive prompt and thorough medical attention.

Tetanus is also a postpartum risk for mares and for their newborn foals. “Mares after foaling can develop tetanus from contaminat­ion of the uterus, and foals are at risk via umbilical infections---though these cases are less common than from puncture wounds,” says Messer.

Lastly, tetanus can occur after surgery, although modern veterinary practices have pretty much eliminated this threat. “Most veterinari­ans are fastidious about proper surgical technique and cleanlines­s,” says Peek, “and prior to doing procedures such as castration they make sure that the horse has had appropriat­e tetanus vaccinatio­n.”

3. ONE TELL-TALE SIGN CAN SIGNAL THE ONSET OF TETANUS.

A stiff gait and/or hyper-reactivity are often the earliest indicators of tetanus but they also are associated with a variety of other conditions, which can make the initial diagnosis difficult. “If a horse overreacts to visual or sound stimuli, and he travels with a choppy stride, you might think he is tying up or has laminitis or neck pain,” says Amy Johnson, DVM, DACVIM, of the University of Pennsylvan­ia. “There are several things that might be suspected, rather

than an early case of tetanus.”

Another common tetanus sign is spasm of the muscles on the head and face. “The horse develops a classic facial expression with ears erect and pointed backward,” says Johnson. “He looks like he’s grimacing, because the muscles of the lips are pulled back, showing the teeth.” (The term for this in human medicine is risus sardonicus, or “sardonic laughter,” which denotes an involuntar­y smile due to contractio­n of the muscles around the lips.)

“In milder cases a horse might not show all of these signs,” says Johnson. There is one indicator, however, that points pretty clearly toward tetanus: the visibility of the third eyelid. “If you wave your hand toward the eye, you’ll see the third eyelid flash up,” she says. “This is not something you would see in a healthy horse. And along with other clues, it will suggest a tetanus diagnosis.”

4. THE DISEASE’S INCUBATION PERIOD CAN LAST SEVERAL WEEKS.

The speed of tetanus onset is influenced by several factors, including the location of the wound, its severity and its level of contaminat­ion. If tetanus spores become lodged in well-oxygenated tissues, they may remain dormant after healing for long periods, until a bruise or another injury at the same site creates conditions that activate the organism and enable it to multiply.

“A lot depends on the level of contaminat­ion of the wound and the amount of toxin being produced, and the location---and how long it has been going on,” says Messer. More foreign material in a wound is likely to mean more C. tetani spores and faster proliferat­ion. On the other hand, the quick discovery, cleaning and treatment of a wound will reduce the threat of tetanus.

Tetanus can result from surgical wounds, although modern veterinary practices have pretty much eliminated this threat.

5. THE PROGRESSIO­N OF TETANUS DEPENDS ON WHERE THE ORGANISM ENTERS THE BODY.

The specific signs in a developing case of tetanus depend on which nerves are affected first. Initially the neurotoxin­s produced by the C. tetani organisms are absorbed by the motor neurons in the vicinity of the original infection site, and they then spread along the nerve cells.

In “ascending tetanus,” the inciting wound is located on a hoof or lower leg, and the neurotoxin travels up the peripheral nerves to the segments of the spinal cord that control that limb. This often results in muscle spasms that primarily affect the limb that sustained the wound.

In “descending tetanus” more neurotoxin is produced than can be absorbed by neurons in the local area, so the excess is carried away by the lymph system and bloodstrea­m, making its way to the brain and/or spinal cord. In these cases, muscle spasms may quickly become evident in the head and jaw.

6. THE BACTERIA THAT CAUSE TETANUS

AND BOTULISM ARE CLOSELY RELATED.

Both Clostridiu­m botulinum and

C. tetani produce potent neurotoxin­s but their effects on the body are in direct contrast to one another--- C. botulinum produces a toxin that inhibits muscle contractio­n causing paralysis,

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 ??  ?? In diagnosis, there is one indicator that points pretty clearly toward tetanus: the visibility of the third eyelid.
In diagnosis, there is one indicator that points pretty clearly toward tetanus: the visibility of the third eyelid.

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