Tetanus vs Antitetanus - What's the difference?
tetanus | antitetanus |
(pathology, countable) A serious and often fatal disease caused by the infection of an open wound with the anaerobic bacterium , found in soil and the intestines and faeces of animals.
(physiology, countable) A state of muscle tension caused by sustained contraction arising from a rapid series of nerve impulses which do not allow the muscle to relax.
* {{quote-journal, 1998, date=January 16, Pierre-Marie Lledo et al., Postsynaptic Membrane Fusion and Long-Term Potentiation, Science
, passage=We first saturated LTP in one pathway by applying repetitive tetani that had no effect on the control pathway (Fig. 4 B). }}
As a noun tetanus
is tetanus.As an adjective antitetanus is
that combats tetanus.tetanus
English
(wikipedia tetanus)Noun
(en-noun)citation