394 Tetanus 



The stronger muscles of the jaw are those that close it; the 

 stronger muscles of the back, those of the erector group. 

 This view is exactly the opposite of Meyer and Ransom,* 

 who believe that the tetanus toxin is absorbed only along 

 the nerve trunks, and found that section of the spinal cord 

 prevented the ascent of tetanus from the lower extremities. 

 Injection of the toxin into a posterior nerve-root produced 

 tetanus dolorosus. Injection of the toxin into a posterior 

 nerve-root together with section of the spinal cord produced 

 exaltation of the reflex irritability "Jactationstetanus." 

 Injection in sensory nerves does not produce tetanus doloro- 

 sus because the transportation of the poison along these 

 trunks is so slow. 



The tetanolysin is a hemolytic component of the toxic 

 bouillon, and is entirely separate and distinct from the tetano- 

 spasmin or convulsive poison. It probably takes no part in 

 the usual clinical manifestations of tetanus. 



Pathogenesis. The work of Kitasato has given us very 

 complete knowledge of the biology of the tetanus bacillus 

 and completely established its specific nature: 



When a white mouse is inoculated with an almost in- 

 finitesimal amount of tetanus culture, or with garden earth 

 containing the tetanus bacillus, the first symptoms come 

 on in from one to two days, when the mouse develops 

 typical tetanic convulsions, first beginning in the neighbor- 

 hood of the inoculation, but soon becoming general. Death 

 follows sometimes in a very few hours. In rabbits, guinea- 

 pigs, mice, rats, and other small animals the period of 

 incubation is from one to three days. In man the period 

 of incubation varies from a few days to several weeks, and 

 averages about nine days. 



The disease is of much interest because of its purely 

 toxic nature. There is usually a small wound with a slight 

 amount of suppuration and at the autopsy the organs of the 

 body are normal in appearance, except the nervous system, 

 which bears the greatest insult. It, however, shows little else 

 than congestion either macroscopically or microscopically. 



The conditions in the animal body are in general un- 

 favorable to the development of the bacilli, because of the 

 loosely combined oxygen contained in the blood, and they 

 grow with great slowness, remaining localized at the seat 

 of inoculation, and never entering the blood. Doubtless 



t " Archiv. f. exper. Path. u. Pharmak.," Bd. xux, 1903, p. 396. 



