ATLAS:
pouzitie peroxidu mava za nasledok tvorbu mrtveho tkaniva, je dobre ho po osetreni tiez odstranit
prave mrtve a nekrotizujuce tkanivo s nedostatkom kyslika je problem, a aj necakane male ranky - tie su najvacsim problemom lebo mozu byt opomenute. boli pripady, ked clovek dostal tetanus po tom, co si rozrypal jebak na brade; kazdopadne najrizikovejsi su diabetici vdaka zlemu okysliceniu krvi
s poslednou vetou sa neda uplne suhlasit, je popisane mnozstvo pripadov u plne zaockovanych a k dispozicii su napr data CDC
Immunisation does not rule out tetanus
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1127160/
klikni na tabulku. 740 pripadov/necela polovica znamy ockovaci status, z nich 53 s komplet primarnymi davkami a 22 malo booster za poslednych devat rokov
co sa tyka vojen:
Enough has been said to show that tetanus in former times was not solely a disease of wounded soldiers. It affected them, it is true, but much less frequently than is generally believed. Tetanus never changed the outcome of a battle, much less a war. One reason, of course, is that it attacked soldiers only after they had been already disabled by wounds. From what is known of the genesis of the disease, there is no reason to believe that its frequency following war wounds varied materially in any given locality from century to century until the advent of bacteriologic era. We know that it was known to the early Greek, Roman, and Arabian physicians, but their writings on the subject were inspired by observation of its striking symptoms and the implacability of its fatal course, rather than by its frequency. We may assume that the frequency was about the same in ancient wars as in recent ones, varying somewhat with the nature of the soil - whether tilled and fertilized or virgin. In the Crimean War, out of 12.094 wounded English, nine cases of tetanus developed. In the American Civil War there were 505 cases out of 246,172 wounded. In the Franco-Prussian War, of 95,000 wounded 950 developed tetanus. Tetanus has therefore always been a rare disease, since it attacked only selected groups - newborn infants, parturient women, and wounded - and spared the general population. It is even rarer today. The reduction in incidence has been brought by very different methods. Among babies and mothers, tetanus has been almost eradicated by cleanliness-aseptic obstetrics; among the wounded, by improved surgery and the use of serum.
Z Holmes: Bacillary and Rickettsial Infections
je to text z roku 1940, preto aj zavery tak treba brat