Microbiology and Immunology

(Axel Boer) #1
Rabies WORLD OF MICROBIOLOGY AND IMMUNOLOGY

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Rabies is caused by a number of different virusesthat
vary depending on geographic area and species. While the
viruses are different, the disease they cause is singular in its
course. The bullet-shaped virus is spread when it breaks
through skin or has contact with a mucous membrane. The
virus begins to reproduce itself initially in muscle cells near
the place of first contact. At this point, within the first five
days or so, treatment by vaccinationhas a high rate of success.
Once the rabies virus passes to the nervous system,
immunizationis no longer effective. The virus passes to the
central nervous system, where it replicates itself in the system
and moves to other tissues such as the heart, the lung, the liver,
and the salivary glands. Symptoms appear when the virus
reaches the spinal cord.
A bite from a rabid animal does not guarantee that one
will get rabies; only about 50% of people who are bitten and do
not receive treatment ever develop the disease. If one is bitten
by or has had any exposure to an animal that may have rabies,

medical intervention should be sought immediately. Treatment
virtually ensures that one will not come down with the disease.
Any delay could diminish the treatment’s effectiveness.
In humans and in animals, rabies may be manifest in
one of two forms: the furious (agitated) type or the paralytic
(dumb) type. Furious rabies in animals, especially in the dog,
is characterized by altered behavior such as restlessness, hid-
ing, depraved appetite, excitement, unprovoked biting, aim-
less wandering, excessive salivation, altered voice, pharyngeal
paralysis, staggering, general paralysis, and finally death.
Death usually occurs within three to four days after the onset
of symptoms. The paralytic form of rabies is frequently
observed in animals inoculated with fixed virus, and is occa-
sionally observed in other animals with street virus contracted
under natural conditions. Animals showing this type usually
show a short period of excitement followed by uncoordina-
tion, ataxia, paralysis, dehydration, loss of weight, followed
by death.

The raccoon is a common transmitter of the rabies virus to humans.

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