DTaP The DTaP is a combination vaccine that covers three diseases; Diphtheria, Pertussis and Tetanus. The DTaP vaccine is given as a 5-shot series at 2, 4, and 6 months, the fourth between 12 and 15 months, and the last between 4–6 years. A booster is recommended to be given between 11 and 12 years of age and is called Tdap.
Transmission Diphtheria is an infection caused by the bacteria
Corynebacterium diphtheria. It is spread through respiratory droplets from coughing and sneezing; it can also be spread through skin lesions on the infected person and through contact with contaminated clothes and objects.
Symptoms The bacteria that causes Diphtheria infects the respiratory system, produces a toxin that, within 2 to 3 days, kills tissue that then builds up over the nasal tissues, tonsils, voicebox and throat, in a thick gray coating called a "pseudomembrane", making it very hard to breathe and swallow. The bacteria's toxin also causes the following symptoms: • sore throat • fever • swollen glands in the neck The toxin may also be absorbed into the blood stream and cause damage to the heart, kidneys and nerves causing severe complications such as: blocking of the airway, damage to the heart muscle (myocarditis), inflammation of nerves, which may cause nerve damage (polyneuropathy), paralysis, lung infection (respiratory failure or pneumonia), and death. Even with treatment, 1 in 10 diphtheria patients die. Without treatment as many as half the patients can die from the disease.
Pertussis (whooping cough) Pertussis is a highly contagious disease that is caused by the bacteria
Bordetella pertussis. The bacteria clings to cilia in the lungs and releases a toxin that damages the cilia and causes inflammation in the respiratory tract.
Transmission Many infants are infected by older siblings or caregivers that do not even know they have the disease. The bacteria is spread through respiratory secretions, often through coughing or sneezing, or just from breathing in the bacteria while around someone who is infected. Unfortunately, the effectiveness of the Pertussis vaccine is dependent on
herd immunity, if pertussis is circulating in the community it is still possible for a vaccinated individual, of any age, to become ill. However, those that are vaccinated may have a less severe infection.
Tetanus (lockjaw) Tetanus is often referred to as lockjaw due to the fact that the bacteria (
Clostridium tetani) cause the muscles of the jaw to tighten, which makes the infected person unable to open their mouth. Today in the United States, tetanus is an uncommon disease with an average of only 29 cases reported per year between 1996 and 2009. Nearly all of these cases are of people who were never vaccinated for tetanus or adults who did not keep up to date with their boosters.
Transmission Tetanus is different from other diseases for which there are vaccinations, in that the bacteria are not spread from person to person. The bacteria are found everywhere in the environment, including in dirt, dust and manure. Tetanus is spread when the bacteria enter the body through open wounds such as cuts, puncture wounds, burns, brush injuries and injuries with dead tissues. Although rare, a person may also become infected with tetanus through superficial wounds (just the top layer of skin has been removed), surgical procedures, insect bites, dental infection, compound fractures (where the broken bone has pierced through the skin), chronic sores and infections and intravenous drug use.
Symptoms Some common symptoms of tetanus are • headache • jaw cramping • muscle spams (often in the stomach) • painful muscle stiffness all over the body • trouble swallowing • jerking or staring (seizures) • fever and sweating • high blood pressure and fast heart rate. Some complications that can arise from tetanus infection are uncontrolled/involuntary muscular contraction of the vocal chords (laryngospasm), break in the bone, hospital acquired infections, blockage of the main artery of the lung or one of its branches by a blood clot that has traveled from elsewhere in the body through the bloodstream (pulmonary embolism), pneumonia, and breathing difficulty that can lead to death. 10–20% of cases are fatal.
Treatment Tetanus is a medical emergency that requires hospitalization, immediate treatment with human tetanus immune globulin (TIG), the tetanus vaccine, drugs to control muscle spasms, aggressive wound care, antibiotics, and depending on how severe the infection is, the patient may need to be put on a ventilator (a machine that breathes for you). ==Haemophilus influenzae type B==