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Tetanus from Hilary

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Those of you who regularly visit BC resources, will know that I started a

tetanus module in June. I still can’t work out how to put the

heading on the home page, so have to wait until my webdesigner can figure

out why the normal method doesn’t work.

So far, here is what is on the website. You can find it by going to

resources, and then clicking on the heading on the left. The

information will continue to morph and grow as I add more. There is

so much more medical information that could be added, and I could write a

book on tetanus. This has almost become one anyway.

I will be continuing to work on this regularly, as it’s one that people

have specifically asked for.

http://www.beyondconformity.org.nz/resources/tetanus

Tetanus. June 2010 . This is a work in

progress.

In 1920, the main street of the town I live in, was compacted

mud. Horses were still ridden on it, and tied up in front of

stores. The farming around here was still primarily " pick and

axe " . Life has changed hugely since 1920. Farming is

mechanised; fencing is mechanised; footwear and gloves vastly improved;

tractors exist; streets are sealed; public sewage common and running

water something that people in 1920 could only hope for. Even so,

if you did a serological survey in the community, whether vaccinated or

not, you would still find higher levels of antibodies in the rural

community than in cities. Even within cities it will vary and those

who love gardening will have higher levels of antibodies than those who

don't. This is totally independant of vaccination, because natural

immunity does exist, and vaccinated people get their natural boosters

from the environment. The medical profession may greet this

information with incredulity, but if they had on their shelves, the

medical information I have on mine, there would be nothing they could say

in rebuttal to what I have to say.

So first question. Can the vaccine save your life? Yes.

Is that a guarantee? No.

So the following information is information which ALL people should

know, since tetanus vaccination does NOT guarantee that you will NOT get

tetanus. While the medical profession likes to take the credit

for ALL the decline of tetanus courtesy of a vaccine, this is simply NOT

true.

The proof of that lies with neonatal tetanus in the developed world,

which DISAPPEARED well before the existence of either anti-toxin or a

vaccine, courtesy of the endless work of people like Florence Nightingale

(who, by the way, was 90 when she died...) and the ignored greats, Drs

Ignaz Semmelweiss and Oliver Wendell Holmes who both excoriated their

colleagues for refusing to wash their hands, and unsanitary medical

practice and facilities. Both of them, at the end of their careers,

had seen no progress on this issue. Dr Semmelweiss committed

suicide, and Dr Holmes was so pissed off, he went and wrote very average

novels and poetry, but made it plain in his last paper, that he was doing

so, because he was disgusted with his colleagues, who he accused of being

systemic murderers, and that he was leaving medicine for the sake of his

own sanity.

Real progress often only happens with people ahead of their time

die. Then everyone says, " Oh yes, that's blindingly

obvious.' Everything we have to be thankful for historically, in

terms of zero puerperal fever, neonatal tetanus; safe childbirth and safe

surgery can be laid at the feet of people who were treated by medical

colleagues like criminals during the time in which they tried to change

their colleagues medical practice.

I know how they feel. The choice to vaccinate is yours, but whether

you do or not, you should read all of the tome below, because while it

may be long, it's all important.

Of all the diseases for which there are vaccines,

tetanus is the one which frightens most people, and for good

reason. While most of us feel we can cope with chickenpox, measles, mumps

and whooping cough, tetanus is the one disease which IF we get it, can be

much more “uncontrollable”. So if you are going to chose not to

vaccinate, there are certain things you must know.

This resource will be as a series of questions in this order:

a) The disease.

B) Standard Hospital treatment.

c) Treatments ignored by hospitals..

d) Information on the tetanus vaccine.

e) What you must know if you don’t vaccinate.

The disease: What is tetanus.

What are the symptoms of tetanus? That depends

on what sort of tetanus you are talking about.

There are five kinds of tetanus.

All can be preceded by nonspecific premonitory symptoms such as

restlessness, irritability and headache.

1) Subacute

tetanus which is characterised by some degree of neck stiffness

involving the muscles at the back of the neck; spasticity, as well as

increased muscle stretch reflexes, especially in the lower limbs.

Patients usually have brief nocturnal generalised spasms There is ankle

clonus, but the plantar response is always flexor. The term “mild

tetanus” is inappropriate because the presence of generalised muscle

spasms is generally felt to imply at least “moderate tetanus” which is

not the case in subacute tetanus.

2) Local tetanus (rare) where the contractions of the muscles are only in

the area of the injury. These contractions can persist for weeks when

treated by the traditional hospital method.

3) Cephalic tetanus (very rare) which can often occur after otitis media

with a burst ear drum. Clostridium tetani can be found from swabs taken

from the middle ear, but sometimes the entry point can be from the cone

put in the ear by the doctor to have a look, or from fingers transferring

tetanus spores into the ear. The main symptoms for this form of tetanus

are in the head and face area.

4) Generalised tetanus (most common sort about 80%) The symptoms

start at the head and work down. Reflex spasms normally occur within 24 –

72 hours, known as the “onset time”. First the person will find it hard

to open their mouth; will have a stiff neck and have difficulty

swallowing.

Symptoms vary hugely. Sometimes, the tetanus is very mild,

sometimes moderat and sometimes serious. the intensity of spasms

and sequance of muscle involvement is quite variable and

individual.

Then there will be spasms, as the muscles react to the toxin, the

stomach muscles will go tight. The temperature will rise in response to

the toxin; there will be sweating, raised heart-rate and the blood

pressure will rise. Characteristically, the manifestation of tetanus

increase in severity for about 3 days after the first sign, and then

remain stable for the next 5 – 7 days. After about 10 days, spasms begin

to occur less frequently and by the end of 2 weeks, they disappear

altogether. Residual stiffness may persist but most people

recover completely in 4 weeks. Occasionally, spasms can continue for 3 –

4 weeks under normal hospital treatment, with complete recovery taking

months in really serious cases. Emotional, visual and aural stimulation

can cause muscle spasms.

5) Neonatal tetanus is primarily in undeveloped countries; very severe,

and usually occurs within 10 days of birth. Early signs include

difficulty in sucking, irritability and excessive crying, associated with

peculiar grimacing. There is intense rigidity, flexion of the arms,

clenched fists, extension of the legs and plantar flexion of the toes.

Spasms occur eith minimal stimuli. The primary cause in

underdeveloped countries is mothers putting camel or other dung on the

umbilical cord and neonatal tetanus is a specific problem relating to

disgusting unhygiene practices surrounding bad indigenous midwifery

practices. Neonatal tetanus used to occur in westernised countries, but

was eliminated before either anti-toxin or vaccines, solely through

obstetricians and midwives cleaning up their act.

All the effects of tetanus toxin are self-limited and completely

reversible in patients who recover from the disease., usually leaving no

residual effects.

The symptoms of tetanus spasms, seizures, back arching and

locking of the jaw are cause by a toxin called tetanospasmin, released by

a bacteria called Clostridium Tetani of which there are many distinct

types. All have one or more common antigens, and produce at least two

toxins. Tetanospasmin which is the exotin which acts on the nerves, is as

toxic as strychnine and is identical across all different clostridial

types.

Tetanus spores are everywhere in the environment. On your bookcase, in

your back yard, in clothing and house dust. Tetanus has been known to

follow surgery and innocuous procedures such as skin testing or

intramuscular injections of medications; injecting drug addicts, and I

also have many case histories of cases following haemorrhoid and other

surgery.

Clostridium bacteria are especially common in the intestines and faeces

of rats, guinea pigs, chickens, cats, dogs, sheep, cattle and horses.

Approximately 5% of humans have clostridium tetani multiplying in their

guts yet don’t even know it.

Clinical tetanus, for some unknown reason, has a male/female ration

2.5/1. Toxin production is favoured by dead or necrotic tissue with

little oxygen.

There are no laboratory tests for tetanus, which is diagnosed solely on

symptoms. However, other tests may be used to rule out strychnine

poisoning which looks very like tetanus.

Other diagnoses which have to be ruled out are: dental infections, local

infections, Hysteria, neoplasm, encephalitis and dystonia. (Hegazi – last

slide)

Dystonia can also be caused by drugs like stemetil, Stelazine and

chlorpromazine (Largactil) so in cases where tetanus is considered,

“pseudotetanus” as a result of drug ingestion should be ruled out first.

http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/119596281/articletext?DOI=10.1111%2Fj.1365-2044.1979.tb08539.x

Benztropine of apam are the antidotes recommended for tetanic like

symptoms from drugs. (Which makes you ask the question, what is the

influence on the nerves from these drugs which can cause such reactions?)

WHO DOES TETANUS PRIMARILY AFFECT?In the medical

literature is the constantly repeated phrase throughout history,

particularly before paved streets, running water and flush toilets...,

that tetanus primarily affects the very young, the old and the

immunocompromised - however they understood that concept in those

days. Generally though, the " weaker " would have been

protected from tetanus, since they didn't have the energy of ability to

do work which would constantly expose them to tetanus spored.

The " rusty nail " originated when horses were always on the

road, and barefoot people stood on horseshoe nails, often embedded in mud

impregnated with horse dung. Today, we know that tetanus spores are

everywhere. Puncture wounds which do not bleed are the most

dangerous, and " rusty nails " aren't the only things which can

carry tetanus spores into someone's body. In children, feet will be

the most likely portal of entry, because they are more likely to run

barefoot, but the portal of entry for older children, or adults is far

more likely to be hands, knees, elbows - and if medical literature is

taken not of - burst middle ear drums and... surgery!

Spores are ubiquitous. They can be found on any surface in hospital, on

your bookcase, in your spit. Human bites and bullet wounds are potential

portals of entry. The fact that the world was well habituated

before a tetanus vaccine shows us that natural immunity existed and

continues to exist in the face of commonsense cleanliness.

Today, in undeveloped countries, the primary risk groups is babies whose

parents or the local midwives put camel or other dung as a traditional

ritual on the umbilical cord, and older people with cuts which haven't

been cleaned out properly.

When Captain Cook came here, there weren't a whole lot of Maori dead from

tetanus. More maori will have died from their constant inter-tribal

utu and wars than would ever have died from tetanus.

When Europeans came here, everything had to be done by hand, and even

then people weren't dying from tetanus hand over foot. (bad pun)

and you know that. How? Well, most of you have a family

tree. How many in YOUR family tree died of tetanus?

Yes tetanus happened and can happen today... and that's why this is

written.

You need to know a whole lot of information. Even more than is put

here, so that you can make choices, and whatever those choices are, know

what you are going to do, and why.

Are splinters the only things which cause

tetanus?No. Tetanus has been noted after skin abscesses,

gangrene, burns, frostbite, middle ear infections, surgery, abortions,

childbirth and drug abuse, primarily " skin popping " .

Sometimes, no " portal of entry " can be figured out. In

terms of puncture injuries, sometimes the smaller ones are the more

dangerous because people don't tend to clean them out.

COMPLICATIONS of tetanus. Complications contribute

significantly to deaths in tetanus. The death rate varies from country to

country and hospital to hospital, and to a degree, depends on the immune

system of the person with tetanus. In underdeveloped countries with

minimal medical assistance the death rate is far higher than in western

countries.

In developed countries, death usually results from a secondary bacterial

complication introduced by intubation, tracheotomy, or a nosocomial

(hospital acquired) infection. Some other complications result from

overly vigorous therapy and prolonged bed rest, while others can be

attributed to the tetanus toxin itself, and failure to neutralise it

adequately. According to one medical text, high fever later in tetanus,

usually signifies secondary infection. Pneumonia is the most common late

complication and is found in up to 70% of autopsied cases. (which I

believe is scurvy induced because of high levels of toxins, and because

hospitals don’t use vitamin C in the treatment of tetanus.)

The death rate from tetanus in developed countries is entirely dependant

upon the quality of medical care, treatment and nutrition given during

tetanus infection. Secondary bacterial infections may become more

of an issue, as continued overuse of antibiotics by the medical system

drives the development of more and more superbugs.

The most current e-medical article on four of these sorts of tetanus, and

the treatment

can be

read here: with another emedicine site being for

paediatric tetanus here:

What is the standard hospital treatment in developed countries?

The standard treatment options are covered in the emedicine

article above.

A powerpoint on clinical features can be seen here. (Hegazi)

And New Zealand?In New Zealand, feedback over the years

has shown that New Zealand hospital treatment depends on the symptoms,

but usually involves the

antibiotic

metronidazole (which is primarily used against anaerobic

bacteria and Giardia) and tetanus

immunoglobulin. Penicillin is not an antibiotic of choice,

because it causes more spasms, and tetracycline should never be used,

because it strips the body of vitamin C which is crucial in any toxin

mediated disease.

Antibiotics make no difference to the course of tetanus disease –

but they

use them anyway. In turn, antibiotics trash the gut

flora, which may make the patient more susceptible to hospital acquired

bacteria such as clostridium difficile and cMRSA or superbugs. They also

trash good gut flora affecting the ability of the body to absorb minerals

and vitamin K, B etc. The detrimental results of heavy duty antibiotic

damage on gut flora can be

permanent. Here is

the proper version of the study. On this basis, you wonder why they

continue to use an antibiotic that has no effect on the course of the

disease.

Depending on the spasms, sedation may be midazolam and morphine, as well

as a paralysing agent for spasms. Morphine however, can make some people

vomit which is not a good idea, so should be carefully monitored. The

room might be darkened and stimulation discouraged. If a temperature is

present, the ubiquitous paracetamol will be used.

For some stupid reason, staff continue to want to bed-bath patients

daily. This is totally unnecesary, and leads to spasms. The

only things that need good cleaning are the nurses hands etc; luer areas;

equipment used in and on the person and the skin in those areas.

Physical stimulation should be kept to a minimum. So while

hospitals do this (wash) they shouldn't IMO.

NZ hospitals regularly turn to avoid bed sores. This is

crucial.

New Zealand hospitals also push vaccination, on the basis that they

say the disease does not confer immunity, and therefore the

person needs vaccines “immunity” by the time immunoglobulin wears off.

Furthermore, hospitals and doctors push the use of vaccine which contain

other disease antigens as well.

The New Zealand Health Department stopped bringing in single tetanus

antigens in March 2007.

Hospital offer/push adults to have the

Quadracel (diphtheria, tetanus pertussis and polio), and for children

hospitals insist on

Infanrix-Hexa, which has diphtheria, tetanus pertussis, polio,

hepatitis B and Haemophilus.

As we stated in our second book in 2008, we view this attitude of the

system to be major impediment to anyone wanting to vaccinate against

tetanus - before or after tetanus ( not during ). In our opinion, the

dropping of the single tetanus antigen, and the of Quadracel or

Infanrix-hexa is " wide net casting " to “trap” people into

having all vaccines. In our view, any vaccine administered to

anyone with tetanus is a totally unnecessary assault on the immune system

on a body which already has more than enough to do.

For anyone chosing to vaccinate against tetanus at any time, single

tetanus antigens, or paediatric DT can still be found in this country,

but requires going under the radar to find medical practices who

privately import vaccine stock from Europe.

Furthermore, there is no medical clinical rationale to vaccinate while

undergoing heavy duty treatment to survive tetanus. Neither are there any

trials to see whether it affects the disease outcome. The body has better

things to do than

derail

the immune system resulting in a T4/T8 ratio to produce an

immunological profile which looks like that of someone with AIDS,

It has since been discovered that the influenza vaccine also results in a

prolonged aberrant immune profile as well. To vaccinate someone while

their body is fighting a serious disease lacks common sense.

The statement that the disease (or exposure to tetanus

spores) does not confer immunity is a nonsense.Some references

on this are:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6680401 ...

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1092755 “ The existence of natural

immunization was unquestionably demonstrated by presence of protective

levels of tetanus antitoxin in the blood of the majority of 59 surveyed

subjects considering that none of them had ever received any tetanus

toxoid and most of them never received a single shot of any drug.”

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2651348 ...

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6114281;,,,,

http://www.jstor.org/stable/30115079

..

WHO recognizes these studies, but dismisses them, and it’s easy to

see why.

The absolute key to tetanus management is careful around the clock

attention to mucus build-up in the lungs, use of magnesium to stabilise

the heart and blood pressure and simply nursing; keeping the patient

well hydrated, paying attention to electrolyte balance, sedation,

reduction of sensory overload, and excellent nutrition. Patients with

tetanus require about two and a half times MORE calories than normal

daily life, due to the metabolic requirements on the body of fighting

tetanus. Any nerve dysfunction and breathing irregularities need to be

carefully managed. Just relying on tetanus immunoglobulin and sedation

gets you nowhere fast.

Unfortunately, hospitals in this country are noted for their abysmal lack

of understanding about nutrition.

What treatments do New Zealand hospitals not use?

1) New Zealand hospitals do not generally use magnesium even though it’s

a standard medical treatment. If you want magnesium treatment you will

have to push for it.

Magnesium should be a

first line

treatment for tetanus . Magnesium stabilises the heart and

reduces blood pressure; reduces the need for sedation, and also makes

nursing simpler. The medical evidence for Magnesium is sound, with the

most recent 2010 article on magnesium in adults is

found

here: and a 1997 medical article on magnesium in tetanus,

can be found here: . A

more recent 2004 article by Attygalle

can be found here. A

2003 article by Cevilla on the use of magnesium in children can be

found here.

Other articles can also be found on

pubmed.

Magnesium was extensively used between 1900 and 1945, because tetanus

anti-toxin was not developed until 1924, and then had a bad reputation

for killing people, primarily because it was made from horses. But with

the advent of slightly safer anti-toxin, and antibiotics, the medical

profession supported patented pharmaceuticals rather than using safe,

established unpatented solutions. Later, human immunoglobulin replaced

the use of dangerous anti-toxin.

2) New Zealand hospitals do not use vitamin C for tetanus. It's a safe

bet that hospitals will reject any suggestion of vitamin C use.

Again, in the early years, vitamin C showed great promise in animal

studies. A

human study in Bangladesh, also pointed to possibilities, but this

study suffers from design problems. Nevertheless, the

Cochrane collaboration considers that it should not be ignored,

because the death rates were so low, despite the fact that the same dose

of vitamin C was used in a baby, compared to a 64 year old, which is a

scientific nonsense. Commonsense would dictate that like antibiotics or

anti-spasmodics, vitamin C should be calibrated for both weight and

severity rather than handing out a routine 1 gram per day, no matter the

age, weight or severity. In American in the 1950’s

Dr Frederick Klenner used vitamin C to good effect with all toxin

mediated diseases including tetanus. Other doctors have also used it, but

they have pretty much kept their heads below the parapet so that the

system doesn’t shoot them between the eyes.

Professor Hemila from Finland wrote a thesis on vitamin C, and in his

2006 thesis collected all animal studies that he could find. The majority

of them found that vitamin C protected against diverse viruses, bacteria

and bacterial toxins.

See pages 6-9 and 105-118 in:

https://www.doria.fi/handle/10024/1540?locale=len

Pages 6-9 are also available as HTML version

http://www.ltdk.helsinki.fi/users/hemila/animals/

(some other parts are listed at:

http://www.ltdk.helsinki.fi/users/hemila/thesis.htm ) Of particular

interest in this case are studies by Dey (and Buller-Souto & Lima

summarized by Clemetson)

3) New Zealand hospitals do not use N-Acetylcysteine (NAC). If

paracetamol is being used to reduce fever, it is potentially liver toxic,

and NAC is the anti-dote. The last thing anyone with tetanus needs is

more pressure on the liver, which will be doing a lot of the detoxication

work getting rid of the exotoxin tetanospasmin. It makes sense to include

NAC. The other reason to consider NAC is that tetanus toxin can thicken

mucus, and NAC thins thick mucus.

4) New Zealand hospitals don’t use homeopathics. Obviously! A list for

specific homeopathics for tetanus

is available here: If you want other lists, google it.

Tetanus vaccine.

CDC handbook on tetanus and vaccine

New Zealand handbook on tetanus

The tetanus vaccine was introduced on the back of World War II experience

– (never mind that both the New Zealand soldiers who died from tetanus

were vaccinated.... and when I was researching the enquiry into why

tetanus happened in soldiers' hospitals, I didn’t know whether to laugh

or cry when an old medical article stated that tetanus spores were found

impregnated in both the cotton wool and bandages used to wrap up wounds!)

Intitially only the military were vaccinated and up until 1960, children

didn’t get the vaccine. Tetanus vaccination for children became universal

in 1961. A different formulation was offered to adults were offered in

1970. If you have looked at the CDC website in USA, you will notice that

graphs for cases or hospitalizations always start the year that

vaccination started. In New Zealand, the graph in the handbook starts in

1970, which doesn’t tell you very much, or give you an idea of

risk/benefit ratio.

There have never been randomized controlled trials with the tetanus

vaccine, for the simple reason that the medical profession, when it

believes in something’s use, considers randomised trials with

unvaccinated controls, unethical.

Only this year, was

the first study

done looking at the responses in adolescents who had been vaccinated as

babies. I have read the whole article, and to say the least, the

results are disturbing. Given that this failure to respond to later

boosters, doesn’t happen when children are vaccinated with a primarcy

schedule at a later age, this should give some people pause for thought,

though not to the researchers, .... whose solution is simply to

give more boosters more often!

The old “more must be better” motto.

Please note that no-one actually knows what the protective level of

antibodies are in humans. This is assumed from studies of animals,

decades ago. Therefore the assumed protective level is a

guess.

Vaccine reactions. (Yet to be done).

The list is long, and I have a whole folder full of many different types.

I will add med article URLs later. In the meantime, use pubmed.

Options regarding tetanus vaccines. Many parents have

reported to us, that the tetanus vaccine is one which they might have

considered for themselves, or their children were it available as a

single vaccination or as a paediatric dT.

They have been told by their doctors, that it is only available as a

combination along with diphtheria, whooping cough polio, hib and

hepatitis B, called

Infanrix-Hexa. Even adults are telling us, if they go to A

& E with an injury, that they are being “offered”,

Quadracel under the guise of a “tetanus” shot which has pertussis,

diphtheria tetanus and the three polio strains. If they are lucky,

they are only injected with

Adacel, which is diphtheria, Tetanus, and pertusis, and don’t find

out until afterwards, that it wasn’t just a tetanus vaccine. Those

who brave the inquisition and say no, are required to sign

disclaimers.

Contrary to what doctors and hospitals are telling you, there are some

practices who will provide single tetanus vaccinations. They must be

imported privately, and usually, the cost of vaccination and

administration is around $70.00. If you are considering a tetanus

vaccination, do not accept the statement, that a single antigen cannot be

done. It is true that medsafe no longer lists a single vaccination, but

that isn’t because a single antigen is no longer available. That is

because it’s now Ministry of Health policy to only “offer” combination

vaccinations to all age groups, which is counterproductive, if that means

that some people who might otherwise have a tetanus shot, refuse a

combination shot.

Can, and do vaccinated people get tetanus? Most people

who are vaccinated, don’t get tetanus, but yes it can happen:

In 1978 Berger et

al published case reports of tetanus despite preexisting antitetanus

antibodies

In 1982, the BMJ reported

tetanus after a bone marrow transplantation in a fully vaccinated

member of the military

In 1986,

Passen et al reported a case in a 35 year old who had had the primary

series and two boosters 8 and 4 years prior to tetanus. His antibody

levels on admission were 16 times higher than presumed protective levels.

What did the hospital do when this man survived? They followed up with

more vaccines. When five vaccine plus 16 times more anitbody than

necessary don’t work, more surely will!

1991. Maselle et al reported

Neonatal tetanus

despite protective serum antitoxin concentration. Seven babies with

clinical tetanus were found to have antibody levels 4 – 13 times higher

than the presumed minimum protective level. Some mothers had received

multiple booster during pregnancy with antibody levels 100 – 400 times

higher than the presumed protective level.

In 1992, Crone et al reported

tetanus in 3

immunized people.

1993 Tetanus in

vaccinated children. Five of the cases in this article were children,

and four were fully immunised.

In 1994, a case was reported in

a fully vaccinated drug user.

In 1995 De Mores Pinto reported neonatal tetanus

despite vaccination

and protective levels of antibodies.

In 1997 generalised tetanus was reported in a man who had had a primary

series and two booster injections, and had tetanus

antibodies more than

100 times the protective level.

In `1998, O’Malley et al, reported a

woman with serious tetanus

despite being fully vaccinated.

1999, Shimoni et al detailed a

34 year old

construction worker fully vaccinated and boostered.

2000 Vinson presented CDC data showing that of 740 listed cases,

53 cases had

completed a primary series and 22 had received their latest boosters

between 5 and 9 year, and two had had boosters within 5 years.

(Follow the links to the pdf in Pubmed)

2000, Abrahamian et all detailed a case in an injecting fully vaccinated

drug user whose

antibody levels

were 16 times higher than presumed for protection.

After a 2003-2004 tetanus outbreak in UK amongst

injecting

drug users (IDU) where some were vaccinated and two had had five

vaccines. It was recommended that IDU be given immunoglobulin

whether vaccinated or not, since their nutrition and lifestyle will

predispose them to tetanus.

Between 2005 – 2007

half the tetanus cases in UK were IDU’s (slide 28) I note they

carefully omit to mention the ones who were fully vaccinated…. (and don’t

you love that female prisoners should receive the rubella vaccination to

prevent them from having congenitally damaged babies? - huh?)

In 2006, Heydari et al reported tetanus in

a healthy immunised

adult.

In 2007, Beltra et al described a patient with

tetanus despite

protective levels of antibodies

And so it goes on.

Many vaccinated cases don’t get reported in the medical literature

anyway. I know of two people who had tetanus, who were fully vaccinated,

and their cases were never reported in the medical literature as

vaccinated. There are a lot more medical articles, but most don’t have

abstracts or full texts available, and are in other languages. So this is

a universally known about issue.

Last but not least is

a doctor's story of how he, fully vaccinated and boostered, got and

survived tetanus. But his story was never written up in the

medical literature. Funny that. This story was written for me

in 2004, and published with permission.

The other interesting issue is that if you look at some of the

serological surveys, particularly those done in USA over the years, quite

a large proportion of well vaccinated people don’t have purported

protective levels of antibody – bearing in mind that these people

never acknowledge the presence of memory immunity for any disease, let

alone consider it a possibility for toxin mediated diseases.

Therefore, no doctor can ever rule out tetanus, even if someone is

vaccinated. A point made by Vinson and Shimoni mentioned previously.

If I don’t vaccinate myself, or my children, I might get tetanus, and

die.

You might. But what are the chances of that? 100% if it happens to you.

Yes, tetanus happens. However, being realistic, how many people in your

family tree got or died of tetanus before the vaccine came out for

universal use in NZ from 1960? Prior to that, only military personnel

received the vaccine. My father died at the age of 95, having been

brought up barefoot around horses, never having had a tetanus vaccination

in his life, and regularly shovelling horse manure yearly in the garden.

I know many people who have never had a tetanus shot, and never will.

Many of the people in new Zealand today, who are 100 years or older, have

not had a tetanus vaccine, and if they did were 60 years old at least,

before they had a primary series. How did they survive? Their immune

systems were up to the job, because every single one of us comes in

contact with tetanus from a very early age. If there was not an inate

natural immunity, the world would never have over-populated before the

tetanus vaccine was rolled out to civilians 40 years ago.

Historically, in the forty years between 1920 and childhood vaccination

began in 1960, the incidence of tetanus was 1.1 cases per 100,000 per

year.

So for every one person who got tetanus, 99,999 people without a vaccine

didn’t get tetanus, and most of them would never get tetanus.

Yes, that means that without vaccination, that in a country of 4 million

people, you could have forty four cases a year in people, most of whom

were never taught proper wound management, if we still lived in a country

in which far more people still rode horses to school, played barefoot in

the horse paddock next to the school, and we had a medical profession

which didn’t understand how to clean out wounds.

On that note I've watched doctors NOT clean out wounds on the assumption

that the person is vaccinated, forgetting that there is far more than

just clostridium tetani in soil....

Please note that that huge dip in the graph above, which also appears in

data from other countries, occured during the times when polio prevention

included huge posters which had phrases like, " Sneezes spread

diseases " ... " Wash your hands after X Y and Z " ...

" Flies are deadly germ spreaders " . There is a huge range

of posters which emphasised cleanliness, food safety, good hygiene, and

" Berty-germ " . It's no coincidence to me that the minute

that focus vanished, tetanus rates climbed yet again.

Serious reactions to tetanus vaccines, such as brachial neuritis, occur

at the same rate as clinical tetanus ... at a rate of 1 per 100,000, so

again, that's part of the risk/benefit equation which has to be weighed

up, but normally people can't weigh it up, becuase people don't get told

what the odds are in getting tetanus, or a reaction. I have a huge

stack of letters from people with serious reactions to the tetanus

vaccine which have permanently blighted their lives. Both sides of

the coin, have potential consequences. Both vaccine reactions, and

clinical tetanus are rare. But if you get either tetanus or a

reaction, data means nothing. Reality is 100%.

The fact that serious reactions, like brachial neuritis, has the same

strike rate for complications, as for getting tetanus itself, also makes

you wonder if there is a genetic susceptibility component with regard to

both getting tetanus, and having a vaccine reaction. This has been

postulated so in other infections when looking at people who don't

respond to Hepatitis B or Hib vaccines. They appear to have the

same gene pattern as those who get serious Hib or become Hep B

carriers. (See medical articles by Poland)

Remember, the choice to vaccinate or not, is yours. The

responsibility to do all you can in every facet of your life, is also

yours.

Were your children vaccinated against Tetanus. No they

were not.

What do you consider important if you don’t vaccinate yourself or

your children?

We consider that many fundamentals are crucial, which are just

about lost knowledge in these days when most people assume the doctor

will fix everything: But these are basic life-long

fundamentals which prepare a person to heal well throughout life,

regardless of the vaccination status, and quite irrelevant to any issues

relating to tetanus, because many infections can result from any puncture

wounds, shell cuts, coral punctures and skin injury.... not just tetanus.

So this information applies to all skin puncture wounds, in all people,

vaccinated or not.

1) A healthy diet with no junk food, no artificial sugar, refined

flour, alcohol, drugs or smoking anything. At any time of life. Pregnant

women even more so, to “build” a healthy baby.

2) Prolonged breastfeeding of babies to build a strong inate immune

system. Most people consider breastmilk to be just food, but it is

not. It's the orchestrator of immune development, as well as a sentinel

within the body with the potential to destroy cancer cells and protect a

person from many chronic diseases until they die.

Seriously.

3) Nutrition, nutrition and nutrition. Fruit, veges, protein, whole

grains…. Everyone should drink water, preferable safely collected and

enclosed rain water, not chlorine, aluminium, fluoride and floculant

permeated municipal supply ghastly tasting stuff.

4) Rule number one: Do not go anywhere, where there is possibly broken

glass, metal splinters, wood splinters etc, with bare feet.

That includes pavements, unsafe beaches, playgrounds, widely

patronized bush areas, green areas inter-city. In the bush, watch out for

bush lawyer plants and other thorny traps. Beware of roses and any plants

with spines. If you have a Phoenix canariensis palm in your garden,

or any other

dangerous variety palm for that matter, get rid of it .

These sorts of palms carry a variety of serious pathogens including,

" an array of aerobic and anaerobic pathogenic bacteria

including Clostridium perfringens the causative agent of the

life-threatening gas gangrene, Bacillus anthracis, and Pantoea

agglomerans. Septic inflammation caused by plant thorn injury can result

not only from bacteria. Medical literature indicates that thorns, spines

or prickles also introduce pathogenic fungi into animals or

humans. "

Quite apart from falling palm branches hitting you on the head,

phoenix and other palms can be exceedingly hazardous for gardeners, or

passers by.

The splinters have barbs and can cause a wide array of serious

clinical problems like septic arthritis. Dirty phoenix palm barbs would

be a prime tetanus spore induction as a splinter, because they are just

about impossible to remove properly without cutting everything wide open.

If you get a phoenix palm splinter, you need to open it right out, which

is painful, and make sure every barb and fragment is removed. If you are

anywhere where there are palms or cactus, don’t touch them, and do not

“wear” bare feet.

Small palm “fruit” is toxic with high levels of oxalic acid as well, and

can cause dermatitis if walked on, and worse. If you live in countries

with poisonous snakes, scorpions and spiders, be aware that palms are

their favourite haunts, as well as for rats, mice and other rodents. In

short, know your plants, poisonous animals and insects and ... plan

ahead.

5) A competent wound care knowledge might not only save your life, but

someone else’s as well, and a thorough understanding of progression of

symptoms of the different sorts of tetanus, methods of treatment, is

crucial.

6) Any cut, splinter, grazed chin from falling off bikes, or toe, knee or

elbow grazes from concrete etc, must be cleaned out immediately. We

always carry snap open saline solution, tweezers and splinter removers

etc… when we travel, and even when we rode bikes.

If you are in hot countries, where hygiene practices are woeful, all

grazes should be washed out with saline solution, sprayed with a hydrogen

peroxide mix (take it with you), and if necessary, follow up with iodine

and witch-hazel. BE PREPARED. BE EDUCATED.

7) Children at school should be taught why and how to treat their own

grazes, because New Zealand school staff often have no idea, because they

assume that all children are vaccinated, and have little understanding

that cuts can cause serious infections quite apart from tetanus. If your

child doesn't want to do this, get the child to ring you, and if

possible, go to the school and do it yourself in the car!

A similar problem exists with doctors and hospitals. We’ve experienced it

ourselves, where doctors haven’t cleaned out something on the basis that

the person is vaccinated. Yet they forget that “soil” contains a whole

lot else other than tetanus spores.

8) In our household all cuts are cleaned thoroughly, and washed out with

a hydrogen peroxide mix. (If you want the specific recipe, email me).

Any barnacle or mini-mussel cuts from beach rocks must be treated

immediately, if the person so cut, was silly enough to rock climb with

bare feet! Open cuts are “dressed” when outside.

For outside work, I wear the cheap beachfeet from the Warehouse, even

when gardening. These allow me to walk and run with a natural foot

action, and I don’t have to worry about bee stings either. I also use

these at the beach for traversing rocks to prevent cuts.

9) The most dangerous tetanus prone splinters are fish bones, fishing

flies, nails in the ground, palm splinters, rose thorns, but tetanus can

be got without a puncture wound.

Never bury fish bones in the garden to break down as manure. Put them in

a “lockable” barrel with water where they will dissolve over time, and

become a liquid compost mix.

If you have children, and are planning a garden, do not plant roses,

agaves or palms and only plant thornless fruit and berry plants. Children

don’t understand the word “no” in a garden. By the same token, once they

are old enough, teach them which plants are dangerous. Knowledge is

power.

10) If you don’t have children, and chose to have “nasty” plants, do not

deal with roses, boysenberries, thorny citrus or any palms without

leather gloves to protect your hands. If you have an immunodeficiency, or

are immunosuppressed from medical treatment, wear cotton gloves and

surgical gloves when dealing with commercial compost, and wet the compost

before transferring it from the bag. (I do all my gardening with cotton

and surgical gloves anyway, and have no time for nasty plants.)

11) When cleaning up large quantities of animal manure, wear cotton and

long surgical gloves, or use shovels etc, and do not touch. This isn’t

just for tetanus protection. It’s just plain common sense. Drum these

rules into your family.

12) Even if you wear gloves, hand and feet-washing and keeping nails

clean, should be a basic, understood by everyone.

13) If you get a splinter of any sort, after removing and cleaning it

out, make sure that you are taking plenty of vitamin C and watch it

carefully for signs of infection, pain, and red streaks travelling away

from the site.

14) Make it your business to learn every possible method of treatment for

septic cuts, burns and wounds in general, so that you can pre-empt any

possible infection of any sort. Learn the nutrients needed for optimum

healing.

Do all this, and you should not have cause to land up at the doctors for

any reason, and if you do, at least you will know you’ve done everything

you could to prevent problems. ( Other than to vaccinate if you so

chose.) However vaccination only provides possible protection against one

of the many hazards which can result from cuts, burns and splinters. And

as you have seen, a tetanus vaccination is not a 100% guarantee that you

might not get tetanus. Even if you vaccinate, learn how to deal with

wounds properly, and clean out every splinter and wound meticulously

regardless.

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