Following the incubation the marked phenomena are tonic contractions of groups of muscles beginning usually with those near to the seat of the infected wound and extending with varying rapidity to the locomotor muscles generally (limbs, croup, back, loins, neck, tail, abdomen) and those of mastication (jaw) and the eye. The muscles of respiration are only involved at a late date, causing stertorous breathing and it may be asphyxia. Peristalsis is impaired so that there is some costiveness and tardiness in digestion. Urination becomes difficult and infrequent on account of the difficulty of assuming the normal position for the act, and spasm of the sphincter vesicæ and dangerous distension of the bladder may follow. The urine is often albuminous and has a high density and color. Priapism is not infrequent in the male.

The predominance of the spasm in special groups of muscles has been the occasion of giving different names to individual cases.

Trismus or lockjaw is that condition in which the muscles of the jaws are violently contracted so that the incisors can only be separated slightly or not at all.

Orthrotonos is that condition in which the muscles in tonic spasms keep the neck, back and loins rigid, straight and unbending, in one horizontal line.

Opisthotonos is when the muscles of the spine are in rigid spasm, so that the back and loins are slightly depressed, the tail elevated and trembling, the neck drawn upward with a concave superior border (“ewed”), the head extended and the nose elevated.

Emprosthotonos is caused by spasms of the muscles of the ventral aspect of the body, with arching of the back and tucking up of the abdomen.

Pleurosthotonos is when the trunk is spasmodically bent to one side, right or left.

Spasms of the muscles of the eyeball, cause sinking and apparent diminution of that organ, with the protrusion of the membrana nictitans over one-third, one-half or even more of its front surface. This is often referred to by owners as “hooks”.

More striking and pathognomonic than the above is the extreme hyperæsthesia and irritability which rouse into activity or aggravate the symptoms under the slightest cause of disturbance. The effort required to feed from the ground, the stretching of himself to urinate or defecate, the rustling of straw litter under his feet, loud talking, or other sudden noise, banging of doors or windows, hammering in the vicinity, a current of cold air, a flash of light, moving the patient in the stall, attempts at mastication, simple handling, administering medicine, or sudden jerking of the head upward promptly brings on a paroxysm of spasm. Pushing the head suddenly upward or jerking on the halter, is often resorted to as a means of diagnosis, the sudden resulting rigidity of the muscles generally, the rolling of the eye, its retraction toward the depth of the orbit and the protrusion of the membrana nictitans over one-half, one-third or more of the cornea, bringing out the diagnostic symptoms in a striking manner. In very severe cases the head may be drawn upward and backward almost to above the loins (Henry), or one or more of the dorsal or lumbar vertebræ may be broken or crushed (Zundel). A sudden loud noise will sometimes cause the exhausted animal to drop to the ground.

Perspiration is not uncommon. Breathing is usually accelerated, the encrease being in ratio with the violence of the spasms. Pulse and temperature are usually normal at first and may be in slight cases throughout. Even in severe cases the pulse does not rise so much as the respiration. In violent and fatal cases the temperature often rises excessively before death (104° to 110° F.).