Earlier this week we had a cow on the necropsy table. Various factors, including the fact that we have to incinerate during the day and the long holiday weekend, resulted in this cow being in our walk-in cooler for 6 days before we could get to her. The owner had dropped her off with another cow. I tried to talk him out of bringing two but he insisted. So now I had to do a necropsy on a rotten cow that was going to have zero diagnostic utility.
A few minutes into it, I stabbed my arm with a very sharp, very contaminated knife. The wound was not large, and we quickly cleaned it with alcohol and slapped some antibiotic ointment and a bandaid on it. But as the day progressed, things began to head south. The area around the wound became firm, hot, had a faint purple tinge, and was welting up. It hurt to move my arm. Even brushing my arm against my shirt was quite painful. By early evening, with this progression of clinical signs, I realized that this was not a routine nick.
Off to urgent care I went. Once I went through the progression of clinical signs and emphasized "clostridium," the staff jumped into action.
Because of a high risk of exposure to tetanus as a veterinarian in general and as a pathologist in the specific, I get boosters every 5 years. The last one was in 2020, so I was due anyway. Yes, tetanus booster please.
Then they came in with the antibiotics, a broad spectrum cephalosporin. This one goes IM in the bum and it stings like crazy. I'm writing this more than 2 days after I got this shot and it still stings.
It took two good nights of sleep and patience, but the miracle of pharmaceuticals knocked that nasty infection down. I have a healing nick in my skin and some bruising (that kind of acute inflammation causes a fair bit of collateral tissue damage), and a sore bum. But I will be fine.
In hindsight, I should have headed to urgent care much sooner, and I will chalk that up to a lesson learned.
I am grateful that I have a job that provides decent insurance. I am grateful that I have access to health care for acute, emergent problems like this. I am grateful to the NPs at the urgent care who responded quickly and professionally even though it was the end of a long day for them. I am grateful that tetanus vaccines still exist (since I expect vaccines to become unavailable/hard to find/not covered by insurance in the coming months to years, I got measles and shingles vaccinations earlier this year). I mention these things because they are now in jeopardy for many citizens of this country. I'm worried.
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