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(Barré) #1

INFECTIOUS DISEASE


In addition to Td vaccination,
give tetanus immunoglobulin
(TIG) for high-risk wounds
with uncertain or <3 prior
immunizations.

MRSA biochemistry:
mecA––a gene that conveys
methicillin resistance found in
all MRSA
Panton-Valentine leukocidin
(PVL)—a virulence factor
found in CA-MRSA

TABLE 8.10. Tetanus Prophylaxis

LOW-RISKWOUND
PRIORIMMUNIZATION (CLEAN/MINOR)HIGH-RISKWOUNDa

≥ 3 dT (if >10 yr since last dose) dT (if >5 yr since last dose)

Uncertain or < 3 dT dT and TIG (250 units IM)

aHigh risk is defined as >6 hours old; contaminated (eg, dirt, saliva, feces); puncture, crush
wounds, or avulsions; foreign bodies, burns, frostbite.

■ Intubation and long-term neuromuscular blockade with vecuronium if
necessary
■ Succinylcholine safe for RSI
■ Tetanus immune globulin (TIG)
■ 3000–5000 units IM
■ Neutralizes circulating tetanospasmin
■ Does not affect toxin already absorbed by CNS
■ Significantly reduces mortality (but not acute symptoms)
■ Tetanus immunization (give opposite site of TIG)
■ Wound treatment
■ Delay wound debridement and irrigation until after TIG (additional
toxin may be released during procedure).
■ Antibiotics
■ Metronidazole
■ Penicillin theoretically contraindicated (may potentate neurotoxin
effects)

WOUNDPROPHYLAXIS
For prophylaxis in the absence of clinical tetanus, see Table 8.10.

Methicillin-ResistantStaphylococcus aureus
■ Began as a hospital-acquired disease (HA-MRSA), but now the community-
acquired form of MRSA (CA-MRSA) is becoming more prevalent and the
two forms are becoming epidemiologically blurred.
■ Resistance to methicillin in both CA-MRSA and HA-MRSA is through the
presence of the mecAgene, which is not found in MSSA.
■ CA-MRSA is more likely to encode the putative virulence factor, Panton-
Valentine leukocidin.
■ CA-MRSA infections should be considered in all patients with soft-tissue
infections. Populations at increased risk include: children at day care cen-
ters, athletic team members, military personnel, prisoners, IVDU patients,
HIV+patients, and Native Americans. Additional risk factors include
skintrauma, contact sports, shaving, higher body mass index, and poor
hygiene.
■ HA-MRSA is most commonly spread from one patient to another by
health care workers whose hands or gloves have become transiently conta-
minated with MRSA. Three major reservoirs of HA-MRSA are patients,
health care workers, and the inanimate environment. The disease is com-
monly found in ICUs.
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