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Rabies

Rabies is a viral disease that causes encephalitis in humans and other mammals.[1] It was historically referred to as hydrophobia ("fear of water") due to the symptom of panic when presented with liquids to drink. Early symptoms can include fever and tingling at the site of exposure.[1] These symptoms are followed by one or more of the following symptoms: nausea, vomiting, violent movements, uncontrolled excitement, fear of water, an inability to move parts of the body, confusion, and loss of consciousness.[1][6][7][8] Once symptoms appear, the result is virtually always death, regardless of treatment.[1] The time period between contracting the disease and the start of symptoms is usually one to three months but can vary from less than one week to more than one year.[1] The time depends on the distance the virus must travel along peripheral nerves to reach the central nervous system.[9]

Rabies
A man with rabies, 1958
SpecialtyInfectious disease
SymptomsFever, fear of water, confusion, excessive salivary secretion, hallucinations, disrupted sleep, paralysis, coma,[1][2] hyperactivity, headache, nausea, vomiting, anxiety[3]
CausesRabies virus, Australian bat lyssavirus[4]
PreventionRabies vaccine, animal control, rabies immunoglobulin[1]
TreatmentSupportive care
PrognosisVirtually 100% fatal after onset of symptoms[1]
Deaths59,000 per year worldwide[5]

Rabies is caused by lyssaviruses, including the rabies virus and Australian bat lyssavirus.[4] It is spread when an infected animal bites or scratches a human or other animals.[1] Saliva from an infected animal can also transmit rabies if the saliva comes into contact with the eyes, mouth, or nose.[1] Globally, dogs are the most common animal involved.[1] In countries where dogs commonly have the disease, more than 99% of rabies cases are the direct result of dog bites.[10] In the Americas, bat bites are the most common source of rabies infections in humans, and less than 5% of cases are from dogs.[1][10] Rodents are very rarely infected with rabies.[10] The disease can be diagnosed only after the start of symptoms.[1]

Animal control and vaccination programs have decreased the risk of rabies from dogs in a number of regions of the world.[1] Immunizing people before they are exposed is recommended for those at high risk, including those who work with bats or who spend prolonged periods in areas of the world where rabies is common.[1] In people who have been exposed to rabies, the rabies vaccine and sometimes rabies immunoglobulin are effective in preventing the disease if the person receives the treatment before the start of rabies symptoms.[1] Washing bites and scratches for 15 minutes with soap and water, povidone-iodine, or detergent may reduce the number of viral particles and may be somewhat effective at preventing transmission.[1][11] As of 2016, only fourteen people were documented to have survived a rabies infection after showing symptoms.[12][13] However, research conducted in 2010 among a population of people in Perú with a self-reported history of one or more bites from vampire bats (commonly infected with rabies), found that out of 73 individuals reporting previous bat bites, 7 people had rabies virus-neutralizing antibodies (rVNA).[14] Since only one member of this group reported prior vaccination for rabies, the findings of the research suggest previously undocumented cases of infection and viral replication followed by an abortive infection. This could indicate that in rare cases people may have an exposure to the virus without treatment and develop natural antibodies as a result.

Rabies causes about 59,000 deaths worldwide per year,[5] about 40% of which are in children under the age of 15.[15] More than 95% of human deaths from rabies occur in Africa and Asia.[1]

Rabies is present in more than 150 countries and on all continents but Antarctica.[1] More than 3 billion people live in regions of the world where rabies occurs.[1] A number of countries, including Australia and Japan, as well as much of Western Europe, do not have rabies among dogs.[16][17] Many Pacific islands do not have rabies at all.[17] It is classified as a neglected tropical disease.[18]

Etymology

The name rabies is derived from the Latin rabies, "madness".[19] This, in turn, may be related to the Sanskrit rabhas, "to rage".[20] The Greeks derived the word lyssa, from lud or "violent"; this root is used in the genus name of the rabies virus, Lyssavirus.[21]

Signs and symptoms

Man with rabies displaying hydrophobia
 
Animals with "dumb" rabies appear depressed, lethargic, and uncoordinated

The period between infection and the first symptoms (incubation period) is typically 1–3 months in humans.[22] This period may be as short as four days or longer than six years, depending on the location and severity of the wound and the amount of virus introduced.[22] Initial symptoms of rabies are often nonspecific such as fever and headache.[22] As rabies progresses and causes inflammation of the brain and meninges, symptoms can include slight or partial paralysis, anxiety, insomnia, confusion, agitation, abnormal behavior, paranoia, terror, and hallucinations.[9][22] The person may also have fear of water.[1]

The symptoms eventually progress to delirium, and coma.[9][22] Death usually occurs 2 to 10 days after first symptoms. Survival is almost unknown once symptoms have presented, even with intensive care.[22][23]

Rabies has also occasionally been referred to as hydrophobia ("fear of water") throughout its history.[24] It refers to a set of symptoms in the later stages of an infection in which the person has difficulty swallowing, shows panic when presented with liquids to drink, and cannot quench their thirst. Any mammal infected with the virus may demonstrate hydrophobia.[25][failed verification] Saliva production is greatly increased, and attempts to drink, or even the intention or suggestion of drinking, may cause excruciatingly painful spasms of the muscles in the throat and larynx. Since the infected individual cannot swallow saliva and water, the virus has a much higher chance of being transmitted, because it multiplies and accumulates in the salivary glands and is transmitted through biting.[26] Hydrophobia is commonly associated with furious rabies, which affects 80% of rabies-infected people. This form of rabies is notorious for causing irrational aggression in the host, which aids in the spreading of the virus through animal bites.[27] The remaining 20% may experience a paralytic form of rabies that is marked by muscle weakness, loss of sensation, and paralysis; this form of rabies does not usually cause fear of water.[25]

Cause

 
Rendering of the rabies virus
 
An electron microscope image of rabies virus.
 
TEM micrograph with numerous rabies virions (small, dark grey, rodlike particles) and Negri bodies (the larger pathognomonic cellular inclusions of rabies infection)
 
Commemorative stamp for Dr. Joseph Lennox Pawan, who isolated the rabies virus

Rabies is caused by a number of lyssaviruses including the rabies virus and Australian bat lyssavirus.[4] Duvenhage lyssavirus may cause a rabies-like infection.[28]

The rabies virus is the type species of the Lyssavirus genus, in the family Rhabdoviridae, order Mononegavirales. Lyssavirions have helical symmetry, with a length of about 180 nm and a cross-section of about 75 nm.[29] These virions are enveloped and have a single-stranded RNA genome with negative sense. The genetic information is packed as a ribonucleoprotein complex in which RNA is tightly bound by the viral nucleoprotein. The RNA genome of the virus encodes five genes whose order is highly conserved: nucleoprotein (N), phosphoprotein (P), matrix protein (M), glycoprotein (G), and the viral RNA polymerase (L).[30]

To enter cells, trimeric spikes on the exterior of the membrane of the virus interact with a specific cell receptor, the most likely one being the acetylcholine receptor. The cellular membrane pinches in a procession known as pinocytosis and allows entry of the virus into the cell by way of an endosome. The virus then uses the acidic environment, which is necessary, of that endosome and binds to its membrane simultaneously, releasing its five proteins and single-strand RNA into the cytoplasm.[31]

Once within a muscle or nerve cell, the virus undergoes replication. The L protein then transcribes five mRNA strands and a positive strand of RNA all from the original negative strand RNA using free nucleotides in the cytoplasm. These five mRNA strands are then translated into their corresponding proteins (P, L, N, G and M proteins) at free ribosomes in the cytoplasm. Some proteins require post-translative modifications. For example, the G protein travels through the rough endoplasmic reticulum, where it undergoes further folding, and is then transported to the Golgi apparatus, where a sugar group is added to it (glycosylation).[31]

When there are enough viral proteins, the viral polymerase will begin to synthesize new negative strands of RNA from the template of the positive-strand RNA. These negative strands will then form complexes with the N, P, L and M proteins and then travel to the inner membrane of the cell, where a G protein has embedded itself in the membrane. The G protein then coils around the N-P-L-M complex of proteins taking some of the host cell membrane with it, which will form the new outer envelope of the virus particle. The virus then buds from the cell.[31]

From the point of entry, the virus is neurotropic, traveling along the neural pathways into the central nervous system. The virus usually first infects muscle cells close to the site of infection, where they are able to replicate without being 'noticed' by the host's immune system. Once enough virus has been replicated, they begin to bind to acetylcholine receptors at the neuromuscular junction.[32] The virus then travels through the nerve cell axon via retrograde transport, as its P protein interacts with dynein, a protein present in the cytoplasm of nerve cells. Once the virus reaches the cell body it travels rapidly to the central nervous system (CNS), replicating in motor neurons and eventually reaching the brain.[9] After the brain is infected, the virus travels centrifugally to the peripheral and autonomic nervous systems, eventually migrating to the salivary glands, where it is ready to be transmitted to the next host.[33]: 317 

 
Two dogs with the paralytic, or dumb, form of rabies

Transmission

All warm-blooded species, including humans, may become infected with the rabies virus and develop symptoms. Birds were first artificially infected with rabies in 1884; however, infected birds are largely, if not wholly, asymptomatic, and recover.[34] Other bird species have been known to develop rabies antibodies, a sign of infection, after feeding on rabies-infected mammals.[35][36]

The virus has also adapted to grow in cells of cold-blooded vertebrates.[37][38] Most animals can be infected by the virus and can transmit the disease to humans. Worldwide, about 99% of human rabies cases come from domestic dogs.[39] Other sources of rabies in humans include bats,[40][41] monkeys, raccoons, foxes, skunks, cattle, wolves, coyotes, cats, and mongooses (normally either the small Asian mongoose or the yellow mongoose).[42]

Rabies may also spread through exposure to infected bears, domestic farm animals, groundhogs, weasels, and other wild carnivorans. However, lagomorphs, such as hares and rabbits, and small rodents, such as chipmunks, gerbils, guinea pigs, hamsters, mice, rats, and squirrels, are almost never found to be infected with rabies and are not known to transmit rabies to humans.[43] Bites from mice, rats, or squirrels rarely require rabies prevention because these rodents are typically killed by any encounter with a larger, rabid animal, and would, therefore, not be carriers.[44] The Virginia opossum (a marsupial, unlike the other mammals named in this paragraph, which are all eutherians/placental), has a lower internal body temperature than the rabies virus prefers and therefore is resistant but not immune to rabies.[45] Marsupials, along with monotremes (platypuses and echidnas), typically have lower body temperatures than similarly sized eutherians.[46]

The virus is usually present in the nerves and saliva of a symptomatic rabid animal.[47][48] The route of infection is usually, but not always, by a bite. In many cases, the infected animal is exceptionally aggressive, may attack without provocation, and exhibits otherwise uncharacteristic behavior.[49] This is an example of a viral pathogen modifying the behavior of its host to facilitate its transmission to other hosts. After a typical human infection by bite, the virus enters the peripheral nervous system. It then travels retrograde along the efferent nerves toward the central nervous system.[50] During this phase, the virus cannot be easily detected within the host, and vaccination may still confer cell-mediated immunity to prevent symptomatic rabies. When the virus reaches the brain, it rapidly causes encephalitis, the prodromal phase, which is the beginning of the symptoms. Once the patient becomes symptomatic, treatment is almost never effective and mortality is over 99%. Rabies may also inflame the spinal cord, producing transverse myelitis.[51][52]

Although it is theoretically possible for rabies-infected humans to transmit it to others by biting or otherwise, no such cases have ever been documented, because infected humans are usually hospitalized and necessary precautions taken. Casual contact, such as touching a person with rabies or contact with non-infectious fluid or tissue (urine, blood, feces), does not constitute an exposure and does not require post-exposure prophylaxis. But as the virus is present in sperm and vaginal secretions, it might be possible for rabies to spread through sex.[53] There are only a small number of recorded cases of human-to-human transmission of rabies, and all occurred through organ transplants, most frequently with corneal transplantation, from infected donors.[54][55]

Diagnosis

Rabies can be difficult to diagnose because, in the early stages, it is easily confused with other diseases or even with a simple aggressive temperament.[56] The reference method for diagnosing rabies is the fluorescent antibody test (FAT), an immunohistochemistry procedure, which is recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO).[57] The FAT relies on the ability of a detector molecule (usually fluorescein isothiocyanate) coupled with a rabies-specific antibody, forming a conjugate, to bind to and allow the visualisation of rabies antigen using fluorescent microscopy techniques. Microscopic analysis of samples is the only direct method that allows for the identification of rabies virus-specific antigen in a short time and at a reduced cost, irrespective of geographical origin and status of the host. It has to be regarded as the first step in diagnostic procedures for all laboratories. Autolysed samples can, however, reduce the sensitivity and specificity of the FAT.[58] The RT PCR assays proved to be a sensitive and specific tool for routine diagnostic purposes,[59] particularly in decomposed samples[60] or archival specimens.[61] The diagnosis can be reliably made from brain samples taken after death. The diagnosis can also be made from saliva, urine, and cerebrospinal fluid samples, but this is not as sensitive or reliable as brain samples.[58] Cerebral inclusion bodies called Negri bodies are 100% diagnostic for rabies infection but are found in only about 80% of cases.[29] If possible, the animal from which the bite was received should also be examined for rabies.[62]

Some light microscopy techniques may also be used to diagnose rabies at a tenth of the cost of traditional fluorescence microscopy techniques, allowing identification of the disease in less-developed countries.[63] A test for rabies, known as LN34, is easier to run on a dead animal's brain and might help determine who does and does not need post-exposure prevention.[64] The test was developed by the CDC in 2018.[64]

The differential diagnosis in a case of suspected human rabies may initially include any cause of encephalitis, in particular infection with viruses such as herpesviruses, enteroviruses, and arboviruses such as West Nile virus. The most important viruses to rule out are herpes simplex virus type one, varicella zoster virus, and (less commonly) enteroviruses, including coxsackieviruses, echoviruses, polioviruses, and human enteroviruses 68 to 71.[65]

New causes of viral encephalitis are also possible, as was evidenced by the 1999 outbreak in Malaysia of 300 cases of encephalitis with a mortality rate of 40% caused by Nipah virus, a newly recognized paramyxovirus.[66] Likewise, well-known viruses may be introduced into new locales, as is illustrated by the outbreak of encephalitis due to West Nile virus in the eastern United States.[67]

Prevention

Almost all human exposure to rabies was fatal until a vaccine was developed in 1885 by Louis Pasteur and Émile Roux. Their original vaccine was harvested from infected rabbits, from which the virus in the nerve tissue was weakened by allowing it to dry for five to ten days.[68] Similar nerve tissue-derived vaccines are still used in some countries, as they are much cheaper than modern cell culture vaccines.[69]

The human diploid cell rabies vaccine was started in 1967. Less expensive purified chicken embryo cell vaccine and purified vero cell rabies vaccine are now available.[62] A recombinant vaccine called V-RG has been used in Belgium, France, Germany, and the United States to prevent outbreaks of rabies in undomesticated animals.[70] Immunization before exposure has been used in both human and nonhuman populations, where, as in many jurisdictions, domesticated animals are required to be vaccinated.[71]

 
A young girl about to receive PEP after being bitten by an animal thought to be rabid

The Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services Communicable Disease Surveillance 2007 Annual Report states the following can help reduce the risk of contracting rabies:[72]

  • Vaccinating dogs, cats, and ferrets against rabies
  • Keeping pets under supervision
  • Not handling wild animals or strays
  • Contacting an animal control officer upon observing a wild animal or a stray, especially if the animal is acting strangely
  • If bitten by an animal, washing the wound with soap and water for 10 to 15 minutes and contacting a healthcare provider to determine if post-exposure prophylaxis is required

28 September is World Rabies Day, which promotes the information, prevention, and elimination of the disease.[73]

In Asia and in parts of the Americas and Africa, dogs remain the principal host. Mandatory vaccination of animals is less effective in rural areas. Especially in developing countries, pets may not be privately kept and their destruction may be unacceptable. Oral vaccines can be safely distributed in baits, a practice that has successfully reduced rabies in rural areas of Canada, France, and the United States. In Montreal, Quebec, Canada, baits are successfully used on raccoons in the Mount-Royal Park area. Vaccination campaigns may be expensive, but cost-benefit analysis suggests baits may be a cost-effective method of control.[74] In Ontario, a dramatic drop in rabies was recorded when an aerial bait-vaccination campaign was launched.[75]

The number of recorded human deaths from rabies in the United States has dropped from 100 or more annually in the early 20th century to one or two per year due to widespread vaccination of domestic dogs and cats and the development of human vaccines and immunoglobulin treatments. Most deaths now result from bat bites, which may go unnoticed by the victim and hence untreated.[76]

Treatment

After exposure

Treatment after exposure can prevent the disease if given within 10 days. The rabies vaccine is 100% effective if given early, and still has a chance of success if delivery is delayed.[29][31][77] Every year, more than 15 million people get vaccinated after potential exposure. While this works well, the cost is significant.[78] In the US it is recommended people receive one dose of human rabies immunoglobulin (HRIG) and four doses of rabies vaccine over a 14-day period.[79] HRIG is expensive and makes up most of the cost of post-exposure treatment, ranging as high as several thousand dollars.[80] In the UK, one dose of HRIG costs the National Health Service £1,000,[81] although this is not flagged as a "high-cost medication".[82] A full course of vaccine costs £120–180.[83] As much as possible of HRIG should be injected around the bites, with the remainder being given by deep intramuscular injection at a site distant from the vaccination site.[31]

People who have previously been vaccinated against rabies do not need to receive the immunoglobulin—only the postexposure vaccinations on days 0 and 3.[84] The side effects of modern cell-based vaccines are similar to the side effects of flu shots. The old nerve-tissue-based vaccination required multiple injections into the abdomen with a large needle but is inexpensive.[62] It is being phased out and replaced by affordable World Health Organization intradermal-vaccination regimens.[62] In children less than a year old, the lateral thigh is recommended.[85] Thoroughly washing the wound as soon as possible with soap and water for approximately five minutes is effective in reducing the number of viral particles.[86] Povidone-iodine or alcohol is then recommended to reduce the virus further.[87]

Awakening to find a bat in the room, or finding a bat in the room of a previously unattended child or mentally disabled or intoxicated person, is an indication for post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP). The recommendation for the precautionary use of PEP in bat encounters where no contact is recognized has been questioned in the medical literature, based on a cost–benefit analysis.[88] However, a 2002 study has supported the protocol of precautionary administration of PEP where a child or mentally compromised individual has been alone with a bat, especially in sleep areas, where a bite or exposure may occur with the victim being unaware.[89]

After onset

At least two treatment schemes have been proposed for treating rabies after the onset of symptoms, the Milwaukee Protocol and the Recife Protocol. The Milwaukee Protocol was first used in 2004 on Jeanna Giese, who became the first person known to have survived rabies without preventive treatments before symptom onset. The protocol puts a person into a chemically induced coma and uses antiviral medications to prevent fatal dysautonomia. The overall protocol is complex; the sixth version of the protocol last updated in 2018 consists of 17 pages with 22 steps of treatment, detailed monitoring, and a timeline of expected complications.[90] The Recife Protocol follows the same principle but differs in details like termination of sedation and supplementary medication.[91]

Prognosis

Vaccination after exposure, PEP, is highly successful in preventing rabies.[77] In unvaccinated humans, rabies is virtually always fatal after neurological symptoms have developed.[92]

Epidemiology

 
Deaths from rabies per million persons in 2012
  0
  1
  2–4
  5–9
  10–17
  18–69
 
Map of rabies-free countries and territories

In 2010, an estimated 26,000 people died from rabies, down from 54,000 in 1990.[93] The majority of the deaths occurred in Asia and Africa.[92] As of 2015, India, followed by China (approximately 6,000) and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (5,600), had the most cases.[94] A 2015 collaboration between the World Health Organization, World Organization of Animal Health (OIE), Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nation (FAO), and Global Alliance for Rabies Control has a goal of eliminating deaths from rabies by 2030.[95]

India

India has the highest rate of human rabies in the world, primarily because of stray dogs,[96] whose number has greatly increased since a 2001 law forbade the killing of dogs.[97] Effective control and treatment of rabies in India is hindered by a form of mass hysteria known as puppy pregnancy syndrome (PPS). Dog bite victims with PPS, male as well as female, become convinced that puppies are growing inside them, and often seek help from faith healers rather than medical services.[98] An estimated 20,000 people die every year from rabies in India, more than a third of the global total.[97]

Australia

Australia has an official rabies-free status,[99] although Australian bat lyssavirus (ABLV), discovered in 1996, is a strain of rabies prevalent in Australian native bat populations.

United States

 
Rabies cases in humans and domestic animals — United States, 1938–2018

Canine-specific rabies has been eradicated in the United States. But rabies is common among wild animals in the United States, and an average of 100 dogs become infected from other wildlife each year.[100][101]

Due to high public awareness of the virus, efforts at vaccination of domestic animals and curtailment of feral populations, and availability of postexposure prophylaxis, incidence of rabies in humans is very rare in the United States. From 1960 to 2018, a total of 125 human rabies cases were reported in the United States; 36 (28%) were attributed to dog bites during international travel.[102] Among the 89 infections acquired in the United States, 62 (70%) were attributed to bats.[102] The most recent rabies death in the United States was an Illinois man who refused treatment after waking up in the night with a bat on his neck; the man died a month later.[103] Occurring in 2021, it was the first case of human rabies in the United States in nearly three years.

Europe

Either no or very few cases of rabies are reported each year in Europe; cases are contracted both during travel and in Europe.[104]

In Switzerland the disease was virtually eliminated after scientists placed chicken heads laced with live attenuated vaccine in the Swiss Alps.[75] The foxes of Switzerland, proven to be the main source of rabies in the country, ate the chicken heads and immunized themselves.[75][105]

Italy, after being declared rabies-free from 1997 to 2008, has witnessed a reemergence of the disease in wild animals in the Triveneto regions (Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol, Veneto and Friuli-Venezia Giulia), due to the spreading of an epidemic in the Balkans that also affected Austria. An extensive wild animal vaccination campaign eliminated the virus from Italy again, and it regained the rabies-free country status in 2013, the last reported case of rabies being reported in a red fox in early 2011.[106][107]

The United Kingdom has been free of rabies since the early 20th century except for a rabies-like virus (EBLV-2) in a few Daubenton's bats. There has been one fatal case of EBLV-2 transmission to a human.[108] There have been four deaths from rabies, transmitted abroad by dog bites, since 2000. The last infection in the UK occurred in 1922, and the last death from indigenous rabies was in 1902.[109][110]

Sweden and mainland Norway have been free of rabies since 1886.[111] Bat rabies antibodies (but not the virus) have been found in bats.[112] On Svalbard, animals can cross the arctic ice from Greenland or Russia.

Mexico

Mexico was certified by the World Health Organization as being free of dog-transmitted rabies in 2019 because no case of dog-human transmission had been recorded in two years.[113]

History

Rabies has been known since around 2000 BC.[114] The first written record of rabies is in the Mesopotamian Codex of Eshnunna (c. 1930 BC), which dictates that the owner of a dog showing symptoms of rabies should take preventive measures against bites. If another person were bitten by a rabid dog and later died, the owner was heavily fined.[115]

In Ancient Greece, rabies was supposed to be caused by Lyssa, the spirit of mad rage.[116]

Ineffective folk remedies abounded in the medical literature of the ancient world. The physician Scribonius Largus prescribed a poultice of cloth and hyena skin; Antaeus recommended a preparation made from the skull of a hanged man.[117]

Rabies appears to have originated in the Old World, the first epizootic in the New World occurring in Boston in 1768.[118]

Rabies was considered a scourge for its prevalence in the 19th century. In France and Belgium, where Saint Hubert was venerated, the "St Hubert's Key" was heated and applied to cauterize the wound. By an application of magical thinking, dogs were branded with the key in hopes of protecting them from rabies.

It was not uncommon for a person bitten by a dog merely suspected of being rabid to commit suicide or to be killed by others.[21]

In ancient times the attachment of the tongue (the lingual frenulum, a mucous membrane) was cut and removed, as this was where rabies was thought to originate. This practice ceased with the discovery of the actual cause of rabies.[33] Louis Pasteur's 1885 nerve tissue vaccine was successful, and was progressively improved to reduce often severe side-effects.[22]

In modern times, the fear of rabies has not diminished, and the disease and its symptoms, particularly agitation, have served as an inspiration for several works of zombie or similarly themed fiction, often portraying rabies as having mutated into a stronger virus which fills humans with murderous rage or incurable illness, bringing about a devastating, widespread pandemic.[119]

Other animals

Rabies is infectious to mammals; three stages of central nervous system infection are recognized. The first stage is a one- to three-day period characterized by behavioral changes and is known as the prodromal stage. The second is the excitative stage, which lasts three to four days. This stage is often known as "furious rabies" for the tendency of the affected animal to be hyper-reactive to external stimuli and bite at anything near. The third is the paralytic stage and is caused by damage to motor neurons. Incoordination is seen, owing to rear limb paralysis, and drooling and difficulty swallowing is caused by paralysis of facial and throat muscles. Death is usually caused by respiratory arrest.[121]

Research

Biotechnological use

The outer shell of the rabies virus, stripped of its RNA contents and thus unable to cause disease, may be used as a vector for the delivery of unrelated genetic material in a research setting. It has the advantage over other pseudotyping methods for gene delivery in that the cell targeting (tissue tropism) is more specific for the central nervous system, a difficult-to-reach site, obviating the need for invasive delivery methods. It is also capable of infecting neighboring "upstream" cells, moving from one cell to axons of the next at synapses, and is thus used for retrograde tracing in neuronal circuits.[122]

Potential treatment

Evidence indicates artificially increasing the permeability of the blood–brain barrier, which normally does not allow most immune cells across, promotes viral clearance.[123][124]

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Pankhurst, Richard. "The history and traditional treatment of rabies in Ethiopia." Medical History 14, no. 4 (1970): 378-389.

External links

 
Wikipedia's health care articles can be viewed offline with the Medical Wikipedia app.
  • Rabies at Curlie
  • "Rabies". Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Retrieved 12 August 2012.
  • Virus Pathogen Database and Analysis Resource (ViPR): Rhabdoviridae
  • OIE's Rabies Portal 13 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • "Rabies virus". NCBI Taxonomy Browser. 11292.

rabies, this, article, about, rabies, humans, rabies, animals, animals, other, uses, disambiguation, rabid, redirects, here, other, uses, rabid, disambiguation, viral, disease, that, causes, encephalitis, humans, other, mammals, historically, referred, hydroph. This article is about rabies in humans For rabies in animals see Rabies in animals For other uses see Rabies disambiguation Rabid redirects here For other uses see Rabid disambiguation Rabies is a viral disease that causes encephalitis in humans and other mammals 1 It was historically referred to as hydrophobia fear of water due to the symptom of panic when presented with liquids to drink Early symptoms can include fever and tingling at the site of exposure 1 These symptoms are followed by one or more of the following symptoms nausea vomiting violent movements uncontrolled excitement fear of water an inability to move parts of the body confusion and loss of consciousness 1 6 7 8 Once symptoms appear the result is virtually always death regardless of treatment 1 The time period between contracting the disease and the start of symptoms is usually one to three months but can vary from less than one week to more than one year 1 The time depends on the distance the virus must travel along peripheral nerves to reach the central nervous system 9 RabiesA man with rabies 1958SpecialtyInfectious diseaseSymptomsFever fear of water confusion excessive salivary secretion hallucinations disrupted sleep paralysis coma 1 2 hyperactivity headache nausea vomiting anxiety 3 CausesRabies virus Australian bat lyssavirus 4 PreventionRabies vaccine animal control rabies immunoglobulin 1 TreatmentSupportive carePrognosisVirtually 100 fatal after onset of symptoms 1 Deaths59 000 per year worldwide 5 Rabies is caused by lyssaviruses including the rabies virus and Australian bat lyssavirus 4 It is spread when an infected animal bites or scratches a human or other animals 1 Saliva from an infected animal can also transmit rabies if the saliva comes into contact with the eyes mouth or nose 1 Globally dogs are the most common animal involved 1 In countries where dogs commonly have the disease more than 99 of rabies cases are the direct result of dog bites 10 In the Americas bat bites are the most common source of rabies infections in humans and less than 5 of cases are from dogs 1 10 Rodents are very rarely infected with rabies 10 The disease can be diagnosed only after the start of symptoms 1 Animal control and vaccination programs have decreased the risk of rabies from dogs in a number of regions of the world 1 Immunizing people before they are exposed is recommended for those at high risk including those who work with bats or who spend prolonged periods in areas of the world where rabies is common 1 In people who have been exposed to rabies the rabies vaccine and sometimes rabies immunoglobulin are effective in preventing the disease if the person receives the treatment before the start of rabies symptoms 1 Washing bites and scratches for 15 minutes with soap and water povidone iodine or detergent may reduce the number of viral particles and may be somewhat effective at preventing transmission 1 11 As of 2016 update only fourteen people were documented to have survived a rabies infection after showing symptoms 12 13 However research conducted in 2010 among a population of people in Peru with a self reported history of one or more bites from vampire bats commonly infected with rabies found that out of 73 individuals reporting previous bat bites 7 people had rabies virus neutralizing antibodies rVNA 14 Since only one member of this group reported prior vaccination for rabies the findings of the research suggest previously undocumented cases of infection and viral replication followed by an abortive infection This could indicate that in rare cases people may have an exposure to the virus without treatment and develop natural antibodies as a result Rabies causes about 59 000 deaths worldwide per year 5 about 40 of which are in children under the age of 15 15 More than 95 of human deaths from rabies occur in Africa and Asia 1 Rabies is present in more than 150 countries and on all continents but Antarctica 1 More than 3 billion people live in regions of the world where rabies occurs 1 A number of countries including Australia and Japan as well as much of Western Europe do not have rabies among dogs 16 17 Many Pacific islands do not have rabies at all 17 It is classified as a neglected tropical disease 18 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Signs and symptoms 3 Cause 4 Transmission 5 Diagnosis 6 Prevention 7 Treatment 7 1 After exposure 7 2 After onset 8 Prognosis 9 Epidemiology 9 1 India 9 2 Australia 9 3 United States 9 4 Europe 9 5 Mexico 10 History 11 Other animals 12 Research 12 1 Biotechnological use 12 2 Potential treatment 13 See also 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksEtymologyThe name rabies is derived from the Latin rabies madness 19 This in turn may be related to the Sanskrit rabhas to rage 20 The Greeks derived the word lyssa from lud or violent this root is used in the genus name of the rabies virus Lyssavirus 21 Signs and symptoms source source source source source source source source source source Man with rabies displaying hydrophobia Animals with dumb rabies appear depressed lethargic and uncoordinated The period between infection and the first symptoms incubation period is typically 1 3 months in humans 22 This period may be as short as four days or longer than six years depending on the location and severity of the wound and the amount of virus introduced 22 Initial symptoms of rabies are often nonspecific such as fever and headache 22 As rabies progresses and causes inflammation of the brain and meninges symptoms can include slight or partial paralysis anxiety insomnia confusion agitation abnormal behavior paranoia terror and hallucinations 9 22 The person may also have fear of water 1 The symptoms eventually progress to delirium and coma 9 22 Death usually occurs 2 to 10 days after first symptoms Survival is almost unknown once symptoms have presented even with intensive care 22 23 Rabies has also occasionally been referred to as hydrophobia fear of water throughout its history 24 It refers to a set of symptoms in the later stages of an infection in which the person has difficulty swallowing shows panic when presented with liquids to drink and cannot quench their thirst Any mammal infected with the virus may demonstrate hydrophobia 25 failed verification Saliva production is greatly increased and attempts to drink or even the intention or suggestion of drinking may cause excruciatingly painful spasms of the muscles in the throat and larynx Since the infected individual cannot swallow saliva and water the virus has a much higher chance of being transmitted because it multiplies and accumulates in the salivary glands and is transmitted through biting 26 Hydrophobia is commonly associated with furious rabies which affects 80 of rabies infected people This form of rabies is notorious for causing irrational aggression in the host which aids in the spreading of the virus through animal bites 27 The remaining 20 may experience a paralytic form of rabies that is marked by muscle weakness loss of sensation and paralysis this form of rabies does not usually cause fear of water 25 Cause Rendering of the rabies virus An electron microscope image of rabies virus TEM micrograph with numerous rabies virions small dark grey rodlike particles and Negri bodies the larger pathognomonic cellular inclusions of rabies infection Commemorative stamp for Dr Joseph Lennox Pawan who isolated the rabies virus Rabies is caused by a number of lyssaviruses including the rabies virus and Australian bat lyssavirus 4 Duvenhage lyssavirus may cause a rabies like infection 28 The rabies virus is the type species of the Lyssavirus genus in the familyRhabdoviridae order Mononegavirales Lyssavirions have helical symmetry with a length of about 180 nm and a cross section of about 75 nm 29 These virions are enveloped and have a single stranded RNA genome with negative sense The genetic information is packed as a ribonucleoprotein complex in which RNA is tightly bound by the viral nucleoprotein The RNA genome of the virus encodes five genes whose order is highly conserved nucleoprotein N phosphoprotein P matrix protein M glycoprotein G and the viral RNA polymerase L 30 To enter cells trimeric spikes on the exterior of the membrane of the virus interact with a specific cell receptor the most likely one being the acetylcholine receptor The cellular membrane pinches in a procession known as pinocytosis and allows entry of the virus into the cell by way of an endosome The virus then uses the acidic environment which is necessary of that endosome and binds to its membrane simultaneously releasing its five proteins and single strand RNA into the cytoplasm 31 Once within a muscle or nerve cell the virus undergoes replication The L protein then transcribes five mRNA strands and a positive strand of RNA all from the original negative strand RNA using free nucleotides in the cytoplasm These five mRNA strands are then translated into their corresponding proteins P L N G and M proteins at free ribosomes in the cytoplasm Some proteins require post translative modifications For example the G protein travels through the rough endoplasmic reticulum where it undergoes further folding and is then transported to the Golgi apparatus where a sugar group is added to it glycosylation 31 When there are enough viral proteins the viral polymerase will begin to synthesize new negative strands of RNA from the template of the positive strand RNA These negative strands will then form complexes with the N P L and M proteins and then travel to the inner membrane of the cell where a G protein has embedded itself in the membrane The G protein then coils around the N P L M complex of proteins taking some of the host cell membrane with it which will form the new outer envelope of the virus particle The virus then buds from the cell 31 From the point of entry the virus is neurotropic traveling along the neural pathways into the central nervous system The virus usually first infects muscle cells close to the site of infection where they are able to replicate without being noticed by the host s immune system Once enough virus has been replicated they begin to bind to acetylcholine receptors at the neuromuscular junction 32 The virus then travels through the nerve cell axon via retrograde transport as its P protein interacts with dynein a protein present in the cytoplasm of nerve cells Once the virus reaches the cell body it travels rapidly to the central nervous system CNS replicating in motor neurons and eventually reaching the brain 9 After the brain is infected the virus travels centrifugally to the peripheral and autonomic nervous systems eventually migrating to the salivary glands where it is ready to be transmitted to the next host 33 317 Two dogs with the paralytic or dumb form of rabiesTransmissionAll warm blooded species including humans may become infected with the rabies virus and develop symptoms Birds were first artificially infected with rabies in 1884 however infected birds are largely if not wholly asymptomatic and recover 34 Other bird species have been known to develop rabies antibodies a sign of infection after feeding on rabies infected mammals 35 36 The virus has also adapted to grow in cells of cold blooded vertebrates 37 38 Most animals can be infected by the virus and can transmit the disease to humans Worldwide about 99 of human rabies cases come from domestic dogs 39 Other sources of rabies in humans include bats 40 41 monkeys raccoons foxes skunks cattle wolves coyotes cats and mongooses normally either the small Asian mongoose or the yellow mongoose 42 Rabies may also spread through exposure to infected bears domestic farm animals groundhogs weasels and other wild carnivorans However lagomorphs such as hares and rabbits and small rodents such as chipmunks gerbils guinea pigs hamsters mice rats and squirrels are almost never found to be infected with rabies and are not known to transmit rabies to humans 43 Bites from mice rats or squirrels rarely require rabies prevention because these rodents are typically killed by any encounter with a larger rabid animal and would therefore not be carriers 44 The Virginia opossum a marsupial unlike the other mammals named in this paragraph which are all eutherians placental has a lower internal body temperature than the rabies virus prefers and therefore is resistant but not immune to rabies 45 Marsupials along with monotremes platypuses and echidnas typically have lower body temperatures than similarly sized eutherians 46 The virus is usually present in the nerves and saliva of a symptomatic rabid animal 47 48 The route of infection is usually but not always by a bite In many cases the infected animal is exceptionally aggressive may attack without provocation and exhibits otherwise uncharacteristic behavior 49 This is an example of a viral pathogen modifying the behavior of its host to facilitate its transmission to other hosts After a typical human infection by bite the virus enters the peripheral nervous system It then travels retrograde along the efferent nerves toward the central nervous system 50 During this phase the virus cannot be easily detected within the host and vaccination may still confer cell mediated immunity to prevent symptomatic rabies When the virus reaches the brain it rapidly causes encephalitis the prodromal phase which is the beginning of the symptoms Once the patient becomes symptomatic treatment is almost never effective and mortality is over 99 Rabies may also inflame the spinal cord producing transverse myelitis 51 52 Although it is theoretically possible for rabies infected humans to transmit it to others by biting or otherwise no such cases have ever been documented because infected humans are usually hospitalized and necessary precautions taken Casual contact such as touching a person with rabies or contact with non infectious fluid or tissue urine blood feces does not constitute an exposure and does not require post exposure prophylaxis But as the virus is present in sperm and vaginal secretions it might be possible for rabies to spread through sex 53 There are only a small number of recorded cases of human to human transmission of rabies and all occurred through organ transplants most frequently with corneal transplantation from infected donors 54 55 DiagnosisRabies can be difficult to diagnose because in the early stages it is easily confused with other diseases or even with a simple aggressive temperament 56 The reference method for diagnosing rabies is the fluorescent antibody test FAT an immunohistochemistry procedure which is recommended by the World Health Organization WHO 57 The FAT relies on the ability of a detector molecule usually fluorescein isothiocyanate coupled with a rabies specific antibody forming a conjugate to bind to and allow the visualisation of rabies antigen using fluorescent microscopy techniques Microscopic analysis of samples is the only direct method that allows for the identification of rabies virus specific antigen in a short time and at a reduced cost irrespective of geographical origin and status of the host It has to be regarded as the first step in diagnostic procedures for all laboratories Autolysed samples can however reduce the sensitivity and specificity of the FAT 58 The RT PCR assays proved to be a sensitive and specific tool for routine diagnostic purposes 59 particularly in decomposed samples 60 or archival specimens 61 The diagnosis can be reliably made from brain samples taken after death The diagnosis can also be made from saliva urine and cerebrospinal fluid samples but this is not as sensitive or reliable as brain samples 58 Cerebral inclusion bodies called Negri bodies are 100 diagnostic for rabies infection but are found in only about 80 of cases 29 If possible the animal from which the bite was received should also be examined for rabies 62 Some light microscopy techniques may also be used to diagnose rabies at a tenth of the cost of traditional fluorescence microscopy techniques allowing identification of the disease in less developed countries 63 A test for rabies known as LN34 is easier to run on a dead animal s brain and might help determine who does and does not need post exposure prevention 64 The test was developed by the CDC in 2018 64 The differential diagnosis in a case of suspected human rabies may initially include any cause of encephalitis in particular infection with viruses such as herpesviruses enteroviruses and arboviruses such as West Nile virus The most important viruses to rule out are herpes simplex virus type one varicella zoster virus and less commonly enteroviruses including coxsackieviruses echoviruses polioviruses and human enteroviruses 68 to 71 65 New causes of viral encephalitis are also possible as was evidenced by the 1999 outbreak in Malaysia of 300 cases of encephalitis with a mortality rate of 40 caused by Nipah virus a newly recognized paramyxovirus 66 Likewise well known viruses may be introduced into new locales as is illustrated by the outbreak of encephalitis due to West Nile virus in the eastern United States 67 PreventionFurther information Dog bite prevention Almost all human exposure to rabies was fatal until a vaccine was developed in 1885 by Louis Pasteur and Emile Roux Their original vaccine was harvested from infected rabbits from which the virus in the nerve tissue was weakened by allowing it to dry for five to ten days 68 Similar nerve tissue derived vaccines are still used in some countries as they are much cheaper than modern cell culture vaccines 69 The human diploid cell rabies vaccine was started in 1967 Less expensive purified chicken embryo cell vaccine and purified vero cell rabies vaccine are now available 62 A recombinant vaccine called V RG has been used in Belgium France Germany and the United States to prevent outbreaks of rabies in undomesticated animals 70 Immunization before exposure has been used in both human and nonhuman populations where as in many jurisdictions domesticated animals are required to be vaccinated 71 A young girl about to receive PEP after being bitten by an animal thought to be rabidThe Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services Communicable Disease Surveillance 2007 Annual Report states the following can help reduce the risk of contracting rabies 72 Vaccinating dogs cats and ferrets against rabies Keeping pets under supervision Not handling wild animals or strays Contacting an animal control officer upon observing a wild animal or a stray especially if the animal is acting strangely If bitten by an animal washing the wound with soap and water for 10 to 15 minutes and contacting a healthcare provider to determine if post exposure prophylaxis is required28 September is World Rabies Day which promotes the information prevention and elimination of the disease 73 In Asia and in parts of the Americas and Africa dogs remain the principal host Mandatory vaccination of animals is less effective in rural areas Especially in developing countries pets may not be privately kept and their destruction may be unacceptable Oral vaccines can be safely distributed in baits a practice that has successfully reduced rabies in rural areas of Canada France and the United States In Montreal Quebec Canada baits are successfully used on raccoons in the Mount Royal Park area Vaccination campaigns may be expensive but cost benefit analysis suggests baits may be a cost effective method of control 74 In Ontario a dramatic drop in rabies was recorded when an aerial bait vaccination campaign was launched 75 The number of recorded human deaths from rabies in the United States has dropped from 100 or more annually in the early 20th century to one or two per year due to widespread vaccination of domestic dogs and cats and the development of human vaccines and immunoglobulin treatments Most deaths now result from bat bites which may go unnoticed by the victim and hence untreated 76 TreatmentAfter exposure Treatment after exposure can prevent the disease if given within 10 days The rabies vaccine is 100 effective if given early and still has a chance of success if delivery is delayed 29 31 77 Every year more than 15 million people get vaccinated after potential exposure While this works well the cost is significant 78 In the US it is recommended people receive one dose of human rabies immunoglobulin HRIG and four doses of rabies vaccine over a 14 day period 79 HRIG is expensive and makes up most of the cost of post exposure treatment ranging as high as several thousand dollars 80 In the UK one dose of HRIG costs the National Health Service 1 000 81 although this is not flagged as a high cost medication 82 A full course of vaccine costs 120 180 83 As much as possible of HRIG should be injected around the bites with the remainder being given by deep intramuscular injection at a site distant from the vaccination site 31 People who have previously been vaccinated against rabies do not need to receive the immunoglobulin only the postexposure vaccinations on days 0 and 3 84 The side effects of modern cell based vaccines are similar to the side effects of flu shots The old nerve tissue based vaccination required multiple injections into the abdomen with a large needle but is inexpensive 62 It is being phased out and replaced by affordable World Health Organization intradermal vaccination regimens 62 In children less than a year old the lateral thigh is recommended 85 Thoroughly washing the wound as soon as possible with soap and water for approximately five minutes is effective in reducing the number of viral particles 86 Povidone iodine or alcohol is then recommended to reduce the virus further 87 Awakening to find a bat in the room or finding a bat in the room of a previously unattended child or mentally disabled or intoxicated person is an indication for post exposure prophylaxis PEP The recommendation for the precautionary use of PEP in bat encounters where no contact is recognized has been questioned in the medical literature based on a cost benefit analysis 88 However a 2002 study has supported the protocol of precautionary administration of PEP where a child or mentally compromised individual has been alone with a bat especially in sleep areas where a bite or exposure may occur with the victim being unaware 89 After onset At least two treatment schemes have been proposed for treating rabies after the onset of symptoms the Milwaukee Protocol and the Recife Protocol The Milwaukee Protocol was first used in 2004 on Jeanna Giese who became the first person known to have survived rabies without preventive treatments before symptom onset The protocol puts a person into a chemically induced coma and uses antiviral medications to prevent fatal dysautonomia The overall protocol is complex the sixth version of the protocol last updated in 2018 consists of 17 pages with 22 steps of treatment detailed monitoring and a timeline of expected complications 90 The Recife Protocol follows the same principle but differs in details like termination of sedation and supplementary medication 91 PrognosisVaccination after exposure PEP is highly successful in preventing rabies 77 In unvaccinated humans rabies is virtually always fatal after neurological symptoms have developed 92 EpidemiologyMain article Prevalence of rabies Deaths from rabies per million persons in 2012 0 1 2 4 5 9 10 17 18 69 Map of rabies free countries and territories In 2010 an estimated 26 000 people died from rabies down from 54 000 in 1990 93 The majority of the deaths occurred in Asia and Africa 92 As of 2015 update India followed by China approximately 6 000 and the Democratic Republic of the Congo 5 600 had the most cases 94 A 2015 collaboration between the World Health Organization World Organization of Animal Health OIE Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nation FAO and Global Alliance for Rabies Control has a goal of eliminating deaths from rabies by 2030 95 India India has the highest rate of human rabies in the world primarily because of stray dogs 96 whose number has greatly increased since a 2001 law forbade the killing of dogs 97 Effective control and treatment of rabies in India is hindered by a form of mass hysteria known as puppy pregnancy syndrome PPS Dog bite victims with PPS male as well as female become convinced that puppies are growing inside them and often seek help from faith healers rather than medical services 98 An estimated 20 000 people die every year from rabies in India more than a third of the global total 97 Australia Australia has an official rabies free status 99 although Australian bat lyssavirus ABLV discovered in 1996 is a strain of rabies prevalent in Australian native bat populations United States Rabies cases in humans and domestic animals United States 1938 2018 Canine specific rabies has been eradicated in the United States But rabies is common among wild animals in the United States and an average of 100 dogs become infected from other wildlife each year 100 101 Due to high public awareness of the virus efforts at vaccination of domestic animals and curtailment of feral populations and availability of postexposure prophylaxis incidence of rabies in humans is very rare in the United States From 1960 to 2018 a total of 125 human rabies cases were reported in the United States 36 28 were attributed to dog bites during international travel 102 Among the 89 infections acquired in the United States 62 70 were attributed to bats 102 The most recent rabies death in the United States was an Illinois man who refused treatment after waking up in the night with a bat on his neck the man died a month later 103 Occurring in 2021 it was the first case of human rabies in the United States in nearly three years Europe Either no or very few cases of rabies are reported each year in Europe cases are contracted both during travel and in Europe 104 In Switzerland the disease was virtually eliminated after scientists placed chicken heads laced with live attenuated vaccine in the Swiss Alps 75 The foxes of Switzerland proven to be the main source of rabies in the country ate the chicken heads and immunized themselves 75 105 Italy after being declared rabies free from 1997 to 2008 has witnessed a reemergence of the disease in wild animals in the Triveneto regions Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol Veneto and Friuli Venezia Giulia due to the spreading of an epidemic in the Balkans that also affected Austria An extensive wild animal vaccination campaign eliminated the virus from Italy again and it regained the rabies free country status in 2013 the last reported case of rabies being reported in a red fox in early 2011 106 107 The United Kingdom has been free of rabies since the early 20th century except for a rabies like virus EBLV 2 in a few Daubenton s bats There has been one fatal case of EBLV 2 transmission to a human 108 There have been four deaths from rabies transmitted abroad by dog bites since 2000 The last infection in the UK occurred in 1922 and the last death from indigenous rabies was in 1902 109 110 Sweden and mainland Norway have been free of rabies since 1886 111 Bat rabies antibodies but not the virus have been found in bats 112 On Svalbard animals can cross the arctic ice from Greenland or Russia Mexico Mexico was certified by the World Health Organization as being free of dog transmitted rabies in 2019 because no case of dog human transmission had been recorded in two years 113 HistoryRabies has been known since around 2000 BC 114 The first written record of rabies is in the Mesopotamian Codex of Eshnunna c 1930 BC which dictates that the owner of a dog showing symptoms of rabies should take preventive measures against bites If another person were bitten by a rabid dog and later died the owner was heavily fined 115 In Ancient Greece rabies was supposed to be caused by Lyssa the spirit of mad rage 116 Ineffective folk remedies abounded in the medical literature of the ancient world The physician Scribonius Largus prescribed a poultice of cloth and hyena skin Antaeus recommended a preparation made from the skull of a hanged man 117 Rabies appears to have originated in the Old World the first epizootic in the New World occurring in Boston in 1768 118 Rabies was considered a scourge for its prevalence in the 19th century In France and Belgium where Saint Hubert was venerated the St Hubert s Key was heated and applied to cauterize the wound By an application of magical thinking dogs were branded with the key in hopes of protecting them from rabies It was not uncommon for a person bitten by a dog merely suspected of being rabid to commit suicide or to be killed by others 21 In ancient times the attachment of the tongue the lingual frenulum a mucous membrane was cut and removed as this was where rabies was thought to originate This practice ceased with the discovery of the actual cause of rabies 33 Louis Pasteur s 1885 nerve tissue vaccine was successful and was progressively improved to reduce often severe side effects 22 In modern times the fear of rabies has not diminished and the disease and its symptoms particularly agitation have served as an inspiration for several works of zombie or similarly themed fiction often portraying rabies as having mutated into a stronger virus which fills humans with murderous rage or incurable illness bringing about a devastating widespread pandemic 119 Miniature of the Cantiga 275 depicting two monks hospitaller with rabies being carried before St Mary of Terena 120 A woodcut from the Middle Ages showing a rabid dog Francois Boissier de Sauvages de Lacroix Della natura e causa della rabbia Dissertation sur la nature et la cause de la Rage 1777 An Arabic folio from the medieval times depicting a rabid dog biting a man circa 1224Other animalsMain article Rabies in animals Rabies is infectious to mammals three stages of central nervous system infection are recognized The first stage is a one to three day period characterized by behavioral changes and is known as the prodromal stage The second is the excitative stage which lasts three to four days This stage is often known as furious rabies for the tendency of the affected animal to be hyper reactive to external stimuli and bite at anything near The third is the paralytic stage and is caused by damage to motor neurons Incoordination is seen owing to rear limb paralysis and drooling and difficulty swallowing is caused by paralysis of facial and throat muscles Death is usually caused by respiratory arrest 121 ResearchBiotechnological use The outer shell of the rabies virus stripped of its RNA contents and thus unable to cause disease may be used as a vector for the delivery of unrelated genetic material in a research setting It has the advantage over other pseudotyping methods for gene delivery in that the cell targeting tissue tropism is more specific for the central nervous 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helicopters thefactsource com 20 November 2019 Retrieved 10 December 2019 Rabies in Africa The RESOLAB network 29 June 2015 Archived from the original on 3 August 2016 Retrieved 18 April 2016 Ministero della Salute Italia e indenne dalla rabbia l Ultimo caso nel 2011 Quotidiano Sanita Archived from the original on 3 June 2016 Retrieved 18 April 2016 Man dies from rabies after bat bite 24 November 2002 Rabies NHS 23 February 2017 Retrieved 30 August 2018 Q amp A Rabies BBC News 17 April 2015 Retrieved 30 August 2018 Mehnert E 1988 Rabies och bekampningsatgarder i 1800 talets Sverige Rabies and remedies in 19th century Sweden Svensk veterinartidning in Swedish Sveriges veterinarforbund 1988 40 277 88 Fladdermusrabies www sva se in Swedish Statens Veterinarmedicinska Anstalt Retrieved 28 October 2022 Como Mexico se convirtio en el primer pais del mundo libre de rabia transmitida por perros BBC News 12 November 2019 Retrieved 12 November 2019 Adamson PB 1977 The spread of rabies into Europe and the probable origin of this disease in antiquity Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain amp Ireland Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 109 2 140 4 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00133829 JSTOR 25210880 PMID 11632333 S2CID 27354751 Dunlop RH Williams DJ 1996 Veterinary Medicine An Illustrated History Mosby ISBN 978 0 8016 3209 9 Rabies an ancient disease Barrett AD Stanberry LR 2009 Vaccines for Biodefense and Emerging and Neglected Diseases Academic Press p 612 ISBN 9780080919027 Archived from the original on 28 April 2016 Retrieved 8 January 2016 The Natural History of Rabies Archived 2 March 2016 at the Wayback MachineThe first major epizootic in North America was reported in 1768 continuing until 1771 when foxes and dogs carried the disease to swine and domestic animals The malady was so unusual that it was reported as a new disease Than K 27 October 2010 Zombie Virus Possible via Rabies Flu Hybrid National Geographic Archived from the original on 13 September 2015 Retrieved 13 September 2015 Santo Tomas Perez Magdalena 2002 La asistencia a los enfermos en Castilla en la Baja Edad Media Universidad de Valladolid pp 172 173 ISBN 84 688 3906 X via Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes Ettinger SJ Feldman EC 1995 Textbook of Veterinary Internal Medicine 4th ed W B Saunders Company ISBN 978 0 7216 6795 9 Carpentier DC Vevis K Trabalza A Georgiadis C Ellison SM Asfahani RI Mazarakis ND July 2012 Enhanced pseudotyping efficiency of HIV 1 lentiviral vectors by a rabies vesicular stomatitis virus chimeric envelope glycoprotein Gene Therapy 19 7 761 74 doi 10 1038 gt 2011 124 PMID 21900965 Roy A Hooper DC August 2007 Lethal silver haired bat rabies virus infection can be prevented by opening the blood brain barrier Journal of Virology 81 15 7993 8 doi 10 1128 JVI 00710 07 PMC 1951307 PMID 17507463 Roy A Phares TW Koprowski H Hooper DC February 2007 Failure to open the blood brain barrier and deliver immune effectors to central nervous system tissues leads to the lethal outcome of silver haired bat rabies virus infection Journal of Virology 81 3 1110 8 doi 10 1128 JVI 01964 06 PMC 1797506 PMID 17108029 Further readingPankhurst Richard The history and traditional treatment of rabies in Ethiopia Medical History 14 no 4 1970 378 389 External links Wikipedia s health care articles can be viewed offline with the Medical Wikipedia app Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rabies Look up rabies in Wiktionary the free dictionary Rabies at Curlie Rabies Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Retrieved 12 August 2012 Virus Pathogen Database and Analysis Resource ViPR Rhabdoviridae OIE s Rabies Portal Archived 13 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine Aerophobia and Hydrophobia in Rabies Videos Rabies virus NCBI Taxonomy Browser 11292 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rabies amp oldid 1144155698, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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