Acute Muscle Rigidity Secondary to Tetanus: A Toxicology Simulation Case for Fourth-Year Medical Students
Elizabeth Mangin, Michelle Troendle

TL;DR
This paper describes a medical training simulation for tetanus, focusing on muscle rigidity and student performance improvement.
Contribution
A novel simulation case for medical students to practice tetanus management amid rising vaccine hesitancy.
Findings
Students showed significant improvement in test scores after the simulation (69.5 to 92.5).
All student groups completed critical actions within the 20-minute time frame.
The simulation effectively trains recognition and management of tetanus symptoms.
Abstract
Tetanus is uncommon in the United States secondary to vaccination. However, vaccination hesitancy is increasing. This case challenges medical students to consider tetanus in the differential and understand its complications. Fourth-year medical students took a pretest on the neurotransmitter glycine and associated disease states. They received two 10-minute lectures on glycine and acid-base abnormalities. Students then participated in a simulation featuring a 27-year-old man bitten by a dog, resulting in tetanus. Required equipment included a mannequin with monitor, a defibrillator, and personal protective equipment. Critical actions consisted of learners dividing up roles amongst each other, using closed-loop communication, placing the patient on a cardiac monitor, choosing to establish IV access and intubate the patient, starting IV fluids, and administering tetanus immunoglobulin.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntramuscular injections and effects · Diphtheria, Corynebacterium, and Tetanus · Innovations in Medical Education
