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Rabies: The Disease, The Virus, The Treatment

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Transmission is direct, primarily via inoculation by bite, with ... The reservoir for rabies is the animal pool that circulates ... Administer RIG and vaccine ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Rabies: The Disease, The Virus, The Treatment


1
Learning to Make Rabies History!
  • RabiesThe Disease, The Virus, The Treatment

2
Rabies The Disease
  • Rabies has been around for centuries described
    as early as 2300 B.C.
  • Transmission is direct, primarily via inoculation
    by bite, with infectious virus present in saliva.
  • The reservoir for rabies is the animal pool that
    circulates rabies virus (diverse species of
    mammals each with a specific strain).
  • Rabies is gt99 fatal once symptoms occur

3
Still Considerable Concern About Rabies In The
US
  • CDC estimates that more than 1 million people per
    year require medical attention for animal bites
    (far fewer than occur)
  • Over 7,000 cases of rabies in animals are
    reported to the CDC annually
  • Although the number of post exposure treatments
    given in the United States each year is unknown,
    it is estimated to be about 40,000

4
Rabies is caused by a virus
  • Family Rhabdoviridae bullet shaped
  • Genus Lyssavirus
  • Rabies
  • Lagos bat strain
  • Mokola
  • Duvenhage
  • EBL-1
  • EBL-2
  • ABLV

Picture from Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/rabies
5
Bullet Shaped MorphologyHelical RNP CoreRNA
Structure And Organization
Rabies Virus
  • Five proteins
  • Ribonucleoprotein (RNP) Core
  • Nucleocapsid protein (N)
  • Nucleocapsid phosphoprotein (NS or P)
  • RNA polymerase (L)
  • Matrix protein (M)
  • Glycoprotein (G)

Cross Sectional
G protein
RNA
Envelope (membrane bilayer)
M protein
RNP
Illustrations from Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/rabies
6
How is rabies contracted
  • Rabies is most commonly spread by bite contact
    between the rabid animal and the recipient animal
    or human
  • In rabies infection, the virus present in the CNS
    and other organs
  • Average incubation period (the time between an
    initial exposure to the virus and the development
    of symptoms of disease) is 4 weeks

7
2 main ecologic cycles Bat all over U.S.
except Hawaii Terrestrial (ground animals)
raccoon, skunk, fox, coyote
Map from Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/rabies
8
Rabies Virus Distribution Worldwide
Major animal reservoirs causing human
death Africa Dog Americas Dog/Bat Asia
Dog Europe Fox
9
Bats Rabies
  • 80 of human rabies cases acquired in US. are
    bat-associated strains
  • A history of a definite bat bite was documented
    in only 5 of these cases 60 had bat contact
    but no known bite or scratch
  • Bite wounds from bats are extremely small and may
    be nearly undetectable within hours. Person
    sleeping may not wake up or otherwise be aware
    of a bite from a bat.

A small bat bite on a finger
10
Rabies Infection
  • Virus-laden saliva or other infectious material
    from the rabid animal must be introduced through
    a break in skin (bite) or onto mucous membranes
  • Virus binds to a nerve cell migrates to spinal
    cord to brain (centripetal spread), then viral
    replication occurs produces encephalitis

11
Rabies attacks the Central Nervous System
  • Watch as the rabies virus from an exposure on the
    leg spreads up the spinal cord to the brain and
    throughout the rest of the body.

Rabies virus entering the body.
12
Transmission/Pathogeneis
  • Viral particles travel out from brain
    (centrifugal spread) via nerve cells to salivary
    glands, where further replication occurs
    secretion in saliva, rendering the person or
    animal to be infectious
  • At the time it gets to the salivary glands, this
    is the end stage of the disease, and death
    usually occurs shortly thereafter within
    several days
  • Incubation period Usually 4 weeks can range
    from 10 days to a year or more (??)

13
Symptoms
  • Headache, fever, sore throat
  • Nervousness, confusion
  • Pain or tingling at the site of the bite
  • Hallucinations
  • Seeing things that are not really there
  • Hydrophobia
  • Fear of water" due to spasms in the throat
  • Paralysis
  • Unable to move parts of the body
  • Coma and death

14
Rabies Human Deaths
  • Annual human deaths worldwide are approximately
    55,000 every 15 minutes a patient dies of
    rabies.
  • 40-70 rabies victioms are children under 15
    years of age
  • Modern cell culture vaccines and animal control
    measures in developed countries have reduced the
    incidence of rabies deaths.
  • In the United States, there has been a mean of 3
    deaths per year since 1990.

15
Prevention steps after an animal bite
  • Wash the wound well with soap and water
  • Have the animal tested for rabies
  • See a Doctor, even if the bite is very small.
  • Contact your local health department and animal
    control officer. 

16
Should Anti-Rabies Prophylaxis be Administered?
  • CONSIDERATIONS
  • High or lower risk animal?
  • Was there an exposure?
  • Likelihood timing for animal capture for
    confinement or testing?

17
High Risk Animals
  • Raccoon
  • Skunk
  • Groundhog
  • Fox
  • Bat
  • free-roaming cats

18
Intermediate Risk Animals
  • Dogs
  • Cats vaccinated or non-roaming
  • Livestock horses, cattle, pigs
  • Other non-rodent wild animal species
  • i.e, opossum, bear, deer, coyote, etc

19
Low Risk Animal
  • Squirrels, chipmunks
  • Rats
  • Mice, voles
  • Indoor small caged pet rodents
  • Logomorphs

20
WHO Definition of Exposure
21
Was There An Exposure?
  • A bite (penetration of the skin by teeth) from a
    known or suspect rabid animal
  • Scratches, abrasions, open wounds (bleeding
    within 24 hrs), or mucous membranes (eyes)
    contaminated with saliva or other potentially
    infectious material from a known or suspect rabid
    animal
  • Other contact - such as petting an animal or
    contact with urine, feces or skunk spray - does
    NOT constitute an exposure

22
Can The Biting Animal Be Confined Observed?
  • Healthy dogs, cats, ferrets and livestock may be
    confined and observed for 10 14 days
  • Raccoons, skunks, fox, groundhogs and other
    wildlife may excrete rabies virus while
    asymptomatic for extended periods and cannot be
    safely confined observed. Testing of the
    animal - or prophylaxis of bite victim - is
    always recommended

23
10 Day Confinement Observation Period
  • In domestic animals the virus usually appears in
    the saliva at the onset of clinical signs so if
    animal healthy, probably not rabid
  • Rarely, the virus can appear in the saliva 1 to 3
    days prior to onset of illness, so thus an
    observation period created
  • Clinical course usually less than 7 days -
    animal dead before end of 10 days

24
Rabies Vaccination Status Of Animal
  • Lower risk if animal has been regularly
    vaccinated
  • But NO vaccine is 100 effective
  • Put as much weight on animal behavior health
    status

25
Animal Behavior/Health Risk Factors To Consider
  • Was the bite or exposure provoked?
  • Did the animal escape in a normal manner?
  • Rabies is characterized by abnormal behavior with
    neurologic impairment.
  • There is often a period of aggression that
    progresses to paralysis, although aggression may
    not always occur

26
Rabies Virus Survival
  • If saliva or other material potentially
    containing the rabies virus is dry to the touch,
    the virus can be considered noninfectious.
  • Stability of the virus in the environment
  • Strong soaps, detergents, acids and alkalis all
    inactivate the virus
  • Heat inactivates the virus
  • Radiation destroys the virus
  • Lipid solvents inactivate the virus

27
WHO Recommended Post-exposure prophylaxis
  • Immediate flushing and washing of the wound with
    soap and water, or other detergent
  • If soap or detergent are not available, flush
    extensively with water
  • Passive immunization Administration of Rabies
    immune globulin for Category III
    contacts/exposures
  • Active immunization Administration of tissue
    culture vaccine according to one of WHO regimens

28
Rabies Postexposure (PEP)
  • Two biologics are administered
  • Human Rabies Immunoglobulin (HRIG) confers
    immediate protection with antibodies vs rabies
  • Rabies Vaccine - patient develops antibodies over
    a 2 to 4 week period

29
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30
Preexposure Vaccination
  • Recommended for veterinarians, veterinary
    technicians, animal control officers, animal
    shelter workers, rabies lab personnel and person
    working with wildlife.
  • Provides protection from unapparent exposures and
    when treatment is delayed
  • Also recommended for persons spending 1 month or
    more in countries with endemic dog rabies and in
    which PEP would likely be significantly delayed
    to geographic distances/ lack of medical
    infrastructure

31
Pre-exposure Vaccination Protocol
  • Three doses of vaccine administered on days 0, 7
    and 21 or 28
  • Dosage 1.0 ml administered IM in the upper
    deltoid
  • Test serum every 2 years to determine if an
    adequate antibody level persists. If absent,
    administer booster

32
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33
Rabies Specimen Testing
  • Only the head or brain of an animal larger than 2
    pounds (squirrel) should be submitted
  • Brain tissue to include Brain Stem, Cerebellum,
    Hippocampus
  • Submitted specimens cannot be returned
  • Specimen should be kept refrigerated but not
    frozen

34
Diagnoses provides surveillance data Surveillance
data helps PEP decisions
35
Resources
  • World Rabies Day Website
  • www.worldrabiesday.org
  • US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
    (CDC) Rabies Website
  • www.cdc.gov/rabies
  • World Health Organization
  • www.who.int
  • Pan American Health Organization
  • http//www.paho.org/english/ad/dpc/vp/rabia.htm
  • Alliance for Rabies Control
  • www.rabiescontrol.net
  • Kansas State University Rabies Laboratory
  • www.vet.ksu.edu/depts/dmp/service/rabies/index.htm
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