Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-18 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 13, 2007 8:1


Rabies 1261

differential diagnosis
In absence of exposure history; little to differentiate rabies from other
viral encephalitides
■Tetanus: Muscle rigidity may resemble rabies/ CSF normal in teta-
nus/usually lucid in tetanus
■Rabies hysteria: a psychological reaction seen in persons exposed to
an animal they believe has rabies
➣Paralytic rabies may resemble other paralytic neurologic disease;
includes poliomyelitis, Guillain-Barre syndrome and transverse
myelitis

management
■Contact isolation is recommended.
■Personnel should avoid contact with patient’s saliva, tears, urine or
other body fluids (virus has not been found in blood).
■Although transmission from patient to hospital staff not docu-
mented, transmission is theoretically possible.
■Reportable
specific therapy
■Once symptoms start, no drug or vaccine improves outcomes.
■Treatment consists of intensive supportive care.

follow-up
n/a

complications and prognosis
Complications
■Almost invariably fatal
■Complications mostly occur during coma phase
➣SIADH
➣Autonomic dysfunction – hypertension, hypotension, cardiac
arrhythmias, hypothermia
➣Seizures: generalized or focal
➣Acute renal failure
➣Secondary bacterial infection of lungs or urinary tract
Prevention
■Prevention is extremely important – if individual is exposed to poten-
tially rabid animal, consult with local health department, consider
post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP)
■Individuals in high-risk occupations (e.g., veterinarians) need pre-
exposure vaccine.
Free download pdf