| Literature DB >> 28674570 |
Segun Ayodeji Ogunkeyede1, Adekunle Daniel1, Omowonuola Ogundoyin1.
Abstract
Suppurative otitis media is a common childhood infection that predisposes to otogenic tetanus. Tetanus is a vaccine preventable disease that is associated with high cost of care and mortality. This study highlights reasons for otogenic tetanus in Nigerian children and way of reducing the menace. This is a 5-year retrospective review of all patients managed for otogenic tetanus in at the Department of Otorhinolaryngology, University College Hospital, Ibadan. The data collected include demographic, clinical presentations, tetanus immunisation history, and duration of hospital admission, and management- outcome. There were 23 patients comprising of 13(56.5 %) males and 10 (43.5%) females, male to female ratio was 1.3:1. The age ranged between 11 months and12 years (mean age 3.4 years ± 2.1). All the patients presented with discharging ear, trismus and spasms. The onset of symptoms prior hospital presentation ranged between 2 - 11 days (mean 3.0 days ± 1.3). Only 12(52.1%) patients had complete childhood tetanus immunisation, 6(26.1) % had no tetanus immunisation and no other childhood immunisation, while 5(21.7%) had partial tetanus immunisation. The discharging ears were managed by self-medication and other harmful health practices. The hospital admission ranged from 20 days - 41days (average of 23days) and there were 3(13.0 %) death. Tetanus immunization was not received because of; non- availability of the vaccine at health centers, lack of health facility in communities, fear of complications from immunization, poor awareness of the immunization programme. Tetanus, an immunisable disease, is still a major problem in Nigeria.Entities:
Keywords: Childhood; Nigeria; otogenic tetanus; paediatric; tetanus immunization
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28674570 PMCID: PMC5483367 DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2017.26.177.11519
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pan Afr Med J
the patient’s immunisation status
| Gender | Fully immunised | Partially immunised | Not immunised | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | 7(30.4%) | 1 (4.3%) | 5(21.8%) | 13(56.5%) |
| Female | 5(21.8%) | 4(17.4%) | 1(4.3%) | 10(43.5%) |
| 12(52.2%) | 5(21.7%) | 6(26.1) % | 23(100%) |
materials used by the mothers in dressing the discharging ear
| Materials applied into the discharging ear by mothers | Topical antibiotics | 23(100%) |
| Herbs | 17(73.9%) | |
| Honey | 10(43.5%) | |
| Cigarette filter | 5(27.3%) | |
| Hydrogen peroxide | 2(8.7%) | |
| Palm oil | 4(17.4%) | |
| Coconut oil | 1(4.3%) |
Some patients used more than one item
the educational level of the parents and the facilities where care was received at onset of tetanus symptoms before hospital presentation
| Facility where care was received | Primary school education | No formal education | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional healers, | 1(11.1%) | 1(11.1%) | 2(22.2%) |
| Spiritual houses | 1(11.1%) | 2(22.2%) | 3(33.4%) |
| Local medicines shops | 2(22.2%) | 2(22.2%) | 4(44.4%) |
| Total | 4(44.4%) | 5(55.5%) | 9(100%) |
factors limiting the rate of immunisation
| Factors affecting immunisation | Affected patients |
|---|---|
| Lack of vaccine at health centers | 5(45.4%) |
| Lack of health post in the community | 3(27.3%) |
| Fear of complications that might arise from immunisation | 2 (18.2%) |
| Lack of awareness of the immunisation programme | 1(9.1%) |
| Total | 11(100%) |