Microbiology of Clostridium Tetani and Wound Classification
Microbiology of Clostridium Tetani and Wound Classification
Microbiology of Clostridium Tetani and Wound Classification
Clostridium Tetani
Is the causative agent of tetanus. The organism is found in soil, feces of horses and other animals, and
normal inhabitant of the intestine of humans and animal.
A. Morphology
Gram positive, rod shaped
Non-capsulated and motile
Spores are spherical, terminal and bulging,
giving characteristic appearance of a ‘drum
stick’
B. Adaptation
Two primary life stages, sporular and
vegetative
The latter stage is extremely anaerobic and
and bacteria of this state are unable to survive
oxygen exposure
In contrast, the sporular form is quite hardly
and can withstand oxygen and environmental
extremes
Utilizing anaerobic infections, such as
infiltration wounds in the skin of humans, C
tetani parasitiez its host using extracellular
excretions to degrade surrounding organic
material for fermentation
As with majority of bacteria, clostridium tetani
reproduces via an asexual reproduction
process known as binary fision, in this process a single bacterium cell that has
reached its maximal growth stage divides into two smaller identical clone bacteria
cells.
C. Toxins
Clostridium tetani produces two distinct toxins: a hemolysin known as tetanolysin and a
powerful neurotoxin called tetanospasmin
Neurotoxin or tetanospasmin
This toxin is reponsible for the clinical manifestation of tetanus
Oxygen-stable and heat-labile
On release from the bacillus the toxin is autolysed to form heterodimer consisting of
a heavy chain and a light chain linked by a disuphide bond
Hemolysin or tetanolysin
Heat-labile, oxygen-labile toxin antigenically related to the hemolysins
Its pathogenic role is not clear
D. Pathogenesis
Clostridium is not an invasive organism
Tetanus develops following the contamination of wounds with spores which may be
from soil, dust, feces, cow dung, etc
Under favorable conditions like O – R potential, devitalized tissue and presence of
foreign bodies, germination of spores and toxin production occurs
The toxin released from vegetative cells and initially binds to receptors on the
precynaptic membranes of motor neurons, it then migrates by the retrogrdae
axonal transport system to the cell bodies of these neurons to the spinal cord nd
brainstem.
The toxin diffuse to terminals of inhibitory cells, including both glycirgenic
interneurons and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-secreting neurons from the
brainstem
The toxin degrades synaptobrevin, a protein required for docking of
neurotransmitter vesicles on the presynaptic membrane.
Release of the inhibitory glycine and GABA is blocked, and the motor neurons are
not inhibited. Hyperreflexia, muscle spasm, and spastic paralysis result
Extremely small amount of toxin can be lethal for humans.
E. Clinical findings
The patient is fully conscious
The incubation period may range from 4 to 5 days to as many weeks
Characterized by tonic contraction of voluntary muscle.
Muscular spasm involve first in the area of injury and infection and then muscle of
jaw (trismus, lockjaw), which contract so that the mouth can not be opened
Death usually results from interference with the mechanics of respiration
The mortality rate in generalized tetanus is very high.
Wound Classification
Wound classification system is a formula that the surgical team uses for post-operatively grading the
extent of microbial contamination