Rabies
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Epidemiology
- Rabies is a NOTIFIABLE zoonosis
- Rabies is found worldwide, though currently considered exotic to the UK and Australia
Host Range:
- All mammals are susceptible
- Very susceptible: foxes, jackals, wolves
- Susceptible (10,000x virus necessary to infect): cats, rodents, bats, skunks, cattle, mongooses
- Moderately susceptible (100,000x virus necessary to infect): dogs, sheep, goats, horses, primates
- Isolates can show to some species specificity in their reservoir host
Reservoir species by region:
Region | Reservoir Species |
---|---|
Europe | Red fox |
Russia, Turkey, Middle East | Dog, Raccoon |
USA | Raccoon, Fox, Skunk |
Africa | Dog, Jackal, Mongoose |
Asia | Dog, Mongoose |
South America | Dog, Vampire bat |
Worldwide | Insectivorous Bats |
- The current position of DEFRA holds bat lyssaviruses to be present in the UK
- Human infection and death an occur after infection with bat rabies
- Nocturnal bat bites account for 50% of human cases in the USA
- Humans develop disease but excrete little virus
- Immune recovered animals are rare, but are not shown to be infections
Diagnosis
- Isolate and monitor for clinical signs
- In the field:
- Remove brain core sample via straw through occipital foramen in the direction of an eye
- Place contents in a 50% glyerol/PBS for FAT or virus isolation, or in 10% formaldehyde for histology
- Whole head can also be removed and sent to lab
- In the lab:
- Fluorescent Antibody Test (FAT) on smears or frozen sections of hippocampus or cerebellum should show presence of Negri bodies
- Being replaced by testing for monoclonal antibodies to nucleoprotein
- Histological detection of Negri bodies using Mann's or silver stains
- Intracerebral inoculation of mice followed by FAT testing of brain smears of affected mice
- RT-PCR on brain or saliva can be performed to determine genotype
- Fluorescent Antibody Test (FAT) on smears or frozen sections of hippocampus or cerebellum should show presence of Negri bodies
Rabies Control
For countries where rabies is considered exotic:
- 6 month quarantine of carnivores and ruminants (Norway, Sweden, Portugal, Australia, New Zealand)
- In the UK, this has been replaced by the Pet Travel Scheme (PETS)
For virus-endemic countries:
- Control in pets:
- Annual Vaccination:
- Antigenicity allows a single antigenic type to vaccinate
- Inactivated virus or canarypox recombinant viruses
- Control of stray population
- Muzzling in public
- Annual Vaccination:
- Control of wildlife reservoir hosts:
- Feeding vaccinated bait
- Secondary consequence of increasing reservoir host population (eg European foxes)
- Control in humans
- Prevention by vaccination with a single booster if bitten
- The current vaccine is grown in human diploid cells (HDCV) and is BPL-inactivated, and therefore costly
- Developing countries utilize older vaccines passaged from a 1939 case ("Flury" vaccines)
- If bitten and unvaccinated:
- Clean and disinfect wound
- Human anti-rabies immunoglobulin administered around bite
- Intramuscular vaccination program: 2 dose-1 dose-1 dose at 0, 7, and 14 days post-bite
- Prevention by vaccination with a single booster if bitten
For more on Rabies control in Europe, see here