Abstract

Cephalic tetanus is a rare clinical form of tetanus, clinically characterized by trismus and cranial nerve palsy involving one or more cranial nerves, facial nerve being the most common. We report a case of cephalic tetanus with left-sided lower motor facial nerve palsy in a 66-year-old non-immunized patient after an untreated laceration injury. The patient had dysphagia, spasm of the muscles of mastication, asymmetry of the left side of the face, cough, shortness of breath, and stiffness of neck muscles. The presentation was unique given that the facial nerve palsy appeared prior to the occurrence of trismus, which misled the initial diagnosis towards Bell's palsy. He was successfully treated with tetanus antitoxin without any adverse events. Although widespread use of tetanus vaccine has led to a dramatic decline in this fatal disease, sporadic disease occurrence is still possible, particularly in individuals without up-to-date vaccinations. In this case report we illustrate the importance of early recognition of cephalic tetanus prior to the development of the full clinical picture. The early initiation of therapy is the key to recovery from this deadly disease. Physicians are encouraged to include cephalic tetanus as a cause of facial nerve palsy in their differential. In particular, paying attention to cases manifesting early after head or neck injury.

Highlights

  • Tetanus is a non-communicable infectious disease caused by Clostridium tetani spores introduced through contaminated nonintact skin [1]

  • The widespread use of the tetanus vaccine has led to a dramatic decline in this fatal disease [3]

  • The characteristic feature of the Cephalic tetanus is the trismus in combination with the paralysis of one or more cranial nerves and/or ophthalmoplegia

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Tetanus is a non-communicable infectious disease caused by Clostridium tetani spores introduced through contaminated nonintact skin (cuts, wounds, abrasions, and lacerations) [1]. Trismus, resulting from the masseter muscle spasm, is frequently the first sign (in 50-75% of cases) This is usually followed by dysphagia, neck stiffness, and the signs and symptoms of cranial nerve palsy [10,11]. It is important to note that there has not been a proper documentation of the current epidemiology of tetanus and patterns of mortality [7] we report a case of cephalic tetanus from rural Armenia where trismus occurred after the facial nerve palsy and discuss with relevant literature review. The clinical history revealed a laceration injury to the mid-forehead due to an accidental fall upon a flower vase 17 days ago He denied loss of consciousness, weakness of limbs, and fever following the incident and managed the wound at home without seeking medical care. Follow-up at two months revealed complete resolution of trismus and some residual mouth deviation to the right side

Findings
Discussion
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call