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Template By: LoxBlog.Com
Dr.javanroodi case report
لوکس بلاگ
سازمان جهانی دامپزشکی
پورتال سازمان دامپزشکی کشور
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Etiology
Rabies results from infection by the rabies virus, a neurotropic virus in the genus
Lyssavirus, family Rhabdoviridae. It is classified as genotype 1, serotype 1 in this group.
There are many strains of the rabies virus, with each strain maintained in particular
reservoir host(s). Although these viruses can readily cause rabies in other species, they
usually die out during serial passage in species to which they are not adapted.
Closely related lyssaviruses can cause a neurologic disease identical to rabies.
Lagos bat virus (genotype 2, serotype 2): This virus is found in bats in parts of Africa.
It was also isolated from the brains of two cats that died of neurologic disease. Mokola
virus (genotype 3, serotype 3): Mokola virus has been isolated from rodents and shrews
in Africa. It caused a small outbreak of neurologic disease resembling rabies in dogs
and cats, and has been isolated from children with neurologic disease. Duvenhage virus
(genotype 4, serotype 4): Duvenhage virus has been found in bats in Africa. It has caused
the deaths of several people with rabies-like disease. The European bat lyssaviruses
(EBLV) are very similar to the Duvenhage virus, but are found in continental Europe.
They are subdivided into two biotypes: EBLV1, genotype 5 and EBLV2, genotype 6.
Clinical cases have been reported in animals (sheep, a stone marten) and humans. The
Australian bat lyssavirus (ABLV) has been isolated in Australia. It is classified as genotype
7, but is not yet classified into a serotype. Viruses of serotypes 2–4, EBLV and
ABLV are known as rabies-related viruses.
Other related viruses – the Obodhiang and Kotonkan viruses in Africa, and the
Rochambeau virus in South America – have not been associated with disease in humans
or domestic animals. Unless otherwise specified, the information in this outline refers to
the classical rabies virus.
Geographic Distribution
With some exceptions (particularly islands), the rabies virus is found worldwide.
Countries that have been free of the classical rabies virus for many years include the
United Kingdom, Ireland, Sweden, Norway (mainland), Finland, Iceland, Japan, Australia,
New Zealand, Singapore, most of Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, the Pacific Islands,
the Indonesian island chains east of Java and Irian Jaya. According to the World Health
Organization (WHO), a country is considered to be free of rabies if there have been no
indigenously acquired cases in humans or animals during the previous two years, in the
presence of adequate surveillance and import regulations. Using this definition, several
additional countries are considered to be free of rabies. In some cases, these countries
have conducted rabies vaccination programs in wildlife, but are susceptible to the reintroduction
of the virus from neighboring countries. Official lists should be consulted for
an up-to-date list of rabies-free countries and areas.
The presence of the rabies-related viruses does not prevent a nation from being
listed as rabies-free. Recently, European bat lyssaviruses were isolated from bats and a
human with neurologic disease in the United Kingdom. Other countries considered to be
rabies-free, such as Australia, also contain rabies-related viruses.
Transmission
Species to species transmission of the rabies virus occurs readily. This virus is usually
transmitted in the saliva, when an infected animal bites another. Less often, it is spread
by any contact between infectious saliva or neurological tissues, and mucous membranes
or breaks in the skin. The rabies virus is not transmitted through intact skin.
There are also rare reports of transmission by other routes. A few cases have been
reported after corneal transplantation and, recently, a single organ donor in the U.S.
infected three recipients of kidney or liver transplants. Aerosol transmission has been
documented in special circumstances, such as in laboratories and bat caves with a high
density of aerosolized virus particles. Rabies viruses have been transmitted by ingestion
in laboratory animals, and there is anecdotal evidence of transmission in milk in animals.
(More conventional routes of spread could not be ruled out in the latter case.) Although
there is some speculation that ingestion could play a role in wild animals, there are no records of human disease acquired by this route. Nevertheless,
in two incidents investigated by the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC), people who drank unpasteurized
milk from rabid cows were given post-exposure prophylaxis.
Pasteurized milk and cooked meat are not expected to
pose a risk of infection, as the rabies virus is inactivated by
heat; however, as a precaution, the National Association of
State Public Health Veterinarians recommends against consuming
tissues and milk from rabid animals.
The dissemination of the rabies virus
within the body
Immediately after infection, the rabies virus enters an
eclipse phase during which it is not easily detected. During
this phase, it replicates in non-nervous tissue such as muscle.
It does not usually stimulate an immune response at this
time, but is susceptible to neutralization.
After several days or months, the virus enters the peripheral
nerves and is transported to the central nervous system
(CNS) by retrograde flow in the axons. After dissemination
within the CNS, where clinical signs develop as the neurons
are infected, the virus is distributed to highly innervated tissues
via the peripheral nerves. Most of the virus is found in
nervous tissue, salivary glands, saliva and cerebrospinal fluid
(CSF), which should all be handled with extreme caution.
Some virus has also been detected in other tissues and
organs, including the lungs, adrenal glands, kidneys, bladder,
heart, ovaries, testes, prostate, pancreas, intestinal tract,
cornea, germinal cells of hair follicles in the skin, sebaceous
glands, tongue papillae and the brown fat of bats. The rabies
virus is contained within the neurons, and handling most
body fluids or intact organs is thought to carry a low risk
of infection. However, a puncture could theoretically pierce
a neuron, and healthcare personnel are given post-exposure
prophylaxis after a needlestick or other puncture wound
received while caring for a rabies patient. The rabies virus is
not spread hematogenously, and blood, urine and feces are
not thought to be infectious.
Epidemiological cycles
Rabies is maintained in two epidemiological cycles,
the urban and sylvatic cycles. In the urban rabies cycle,
dogs are the main reservoir host. This cycle is predominant
in much of Africa, Asia, and Central and South America,
where the proportion of unvaccinated and semi-owned or
stray dogs is high. It has been virtually eliminated in North
America and Europe; although sporadic cases occur in dogs
infected by wild animals, the urban cycle is not perpetuated
in the dog population.
The sylvatic (or wildlife) cycle is the predominant cycle
in Europe and North America. It is also present simultaneously
with the urban cycle in some parts of the world. The
epidemiology of this cycle is complex; factors affecting it
include the virus strain, behavior of the host species, ecology and environmental factors. In any ecosystem, only one and
occasionally up to three wildlife species are responsible for
perpetuating a particular strain of rabies. The disease pattern
in wildlife can either be relatively stable, or occur as a slow
moving epidemic. Recent examples of epidemics include a
fox rabies epidemic that moved slowly west in Europe, and
a raccoon rabies epidemic that moved north along the east
coast of the U.S.
Disinfection
The rabies virus can be inactivated by lipid solvents
(soap solutions, ether, chloroform, acetone), 1% sodium
hypochlorite, 2% glutaraldehyde, 45-75% ethanol, iodine
preparations, quaternary ammonium compounds, formaldehyde
or a low pH. This virus is also susceptible to ultraviolet
radiation or heat of 1 hour at 50° C. It is rapidly inactivated
in sunlight, and does not survive for long periods in the environment
except in a cool dark area.
Infections in Humans
Incubation Period
In humans, the incubation period is a few days to several
years. Most cases become apparent after 1 to 3 months.
In one study, approximately 4-10% of cases had an incubation
period of 6 months or more.
Clinical Signs
The early symptoms may include nonspecific prodromal
signs such as malaise, fever or headache, as well as discomfort,
pain, pruritus or sensory alterations at the site of virus
entry. After several days, anxiety, confusion and agitation
may appear, and progress to insomnia, abnormal behavior,
hypersensitivity to light and sound, delirium, hallucinations,
slight or partial paralysis, hypersalivation, difficulty
swallowing, pharyngeal spasms upon exposure to liquids,
and convulsions. Either an encephalitic (furious) form with
hyperexcitability, autonomic dysfunction and hydrophobia,
or a paralytic (dumb) form characterized by generalized
paralysis, may predominate. Death usually occurs within 2
to 10 days; survival is extremely rare.
Communicability
Human saliva contains the rabies virus; person-to-person
transmission is theoretically possible but rare. Activities
that could pose a risk for exposure include bites, kisses or
other direct contact between saliva and mucous membranes
or broken skin, sexual activity, and sharing eating or drinking
utensils or cigarettes. The CDC also recommends prophylactic
treatment after a needlestick or other sharp object
injury during an autopsy or during patient care, due to the
possibility that the object could have passed through nervous
tissue. Feces, blood, urine and other body fluids are not thought to carry the virus. A few cases of transmission have
been reported in corneal transplants and, recently, several
cases of rabies resulting from a single infected organ donor.
It is not known how long humans can shed the virus
before becoming symptomatic; the CDC recommends postexposure
prophylaxis for anyone who had at-risk contact with
a person during the 14 days before the onset of clinical signs.
Diagnostic Tests
Antemortem diagnosis may include virus isolation,
antigen detection or serology. More than one test is usually
necessary for a diagnosis. RT-PCR may be able to detect
the rabies virus in serum or CSF. Viral antigens may also
be detected, using RT-PCR or immunofluorescence, in skin
biopsies taken from the nape of the neck; the antigens are
found in the cutaneous nerves at the base of the hair follicles.
Serological tests include indirect immunofluorescence and
virus neutralization, and can be performed on serum or CSF.
Circulating neutralizing antibodies usually do not appear
until late, and infected people may still be seronegative
when they die. Postmortem diagnosis is usually by immunofluorescence
to detect viral antigens in the brain. A RT-PCR
technique has also been published.
Treatment
Postexposure prophylaxis consists of immediate wound
cleansing and disinfection, followed by rabies vaccination
and the administration of human rabies immunoglobulin.
The rabies vaccine is given as five doses in the U.S., and
is usually administered intramuscularly in the arm. Fewer
doses and no rabies immunoglobulin are given if the person
was previously vaccinated. Postexposure prophylaxis is
highly effective if it is begun soon after exposure.
There is no effective treatment once the symptoms
develop. Treatment is palliative. Vaccines, antivirals, interferon,
antibodies and ketamine, with supportive care, may
be tried but have been ineffective in the past. There is a very
high probability of an unsuccessful outcome. If treatment is
successful, there may be permanent and possibly severe neurologic
defects.
Prevention
Rabies prevention depends on the vaccination of pets,
to prevent exposure and subsequent transmission to humans,
and the prevention of bites from rabid animals. Wild animals
should not be handled or fed, and wildlife behaving abnormally
should, in particular, be avoided. Bats should be kept
out of houses and public buildings. In some areas, oral vaccination
of wild animal reservoirs may be practiced.
Veterinarians and animal control officers should handle
potentially rabid animals with extreme caution. Protective
clothing such as thick rubber gloves, eye goggles and a plastic
or rubber apron should be worn when doing autopsies or in other circumstances when exposure to infectious tissues
could occur.
Bites or other exposure should be reported immediately.
Post-exposure prophylaxis consists of immediate
wound cleansing and disinfection, rabies vaccination and the
administration of human rabies immunoglobulin. The rabies
vaccine is given as five doses in the U.S., usually administered
intramuscularly in the arm. Fewer doses and no rabies
immunoglobulin are given if the person was previously vaccinated.
Asymptomatic dogs, cats or ferrets that have bitten
humans are currently observed for 10 days; if the animal
develops symptoms of rabies during this time, it is euthanized
and tested for rabies.
An inactivated human vaccine is available for veterinarians,
animal handlers, laboratory workers and others at a high
risk of exposure. International travelers may in some cases
also be vaccinated. There is little or no cross-protection with
some rabies-related viruses, particularly the Mokola virus.
Rabies vaccination does not prevent the need for post-exposure
prophylaxis, but does eliminate the requirement for
rabies immune globulin and decreases the number of postexposure
vaccinations. It may also provide some protection
for persons with inapparent exposure or enhance immunity
if postexposure prophylaxis is delayed.
Morbidity and Mortality
In the U.S., clinical rabies is rare in humans, with 0 to 3
cases usually reported each year. Deaths are usually reported
in people who did not realize they had been exposed or,
for some other reason, did not seek medical treatment. Postexposure
prophylaxis, begun promptly, is almost always successful.
Human rabies is also rare in Canada, most European
countries, and some countries in South America. The prevalence
rates are high in some parts of the developing world.
Worldwide, approximately 90% of rabies cases occur
after exposure to rabid dogs. In countries with a high percentage
of vaccinated dogs, they are much less important as
a vector. In the U.S., most recent human cases were associated
with exposure to bats.
Factors that affect the outcome of exposure include the
virus variant, dose of virus, route and location of exposure,
and host factors such as age and immune status. Without
post-exposure prophylaxis, an estimated 20% of people
bitten by rabid dogs develop rabies. Once the symptoms
appear, the disease is almost always fatal within three
weeks, even with intensive care. There have been only
six reported cases of survival through the acute illness,
and some of these people were left with severe neurologic
complications. All had been treated with a rabies vaccine
before or soon after exposure, and before the symptoms
developed. Some of these cases could have been post-vaccinal
encephalomyelitis rather than rabies
Infections in Animals
Species Affected
All mammals are susceptible to rabies. Important reservoir
hosts include members of the Canidae (dogs, jackals,
wolves, foxes), Mustelidae (skunks, martens, weasels and
stoats), Viverridae (mongooses and meerkats), and Procyonidae
(raccoons), and the order Chiroptera (bats).
Reservoir hosts important in various world regions
include: insectivorous bats, skunks, raccoons and foxes in
the U.S.; foxes in continental Europe, Canada, Greenland
and the former Soviet Union
Dogs in Africa, Asia, and Central and South America;
jackals in parts of Africa, Asia and the Middle East; vampire
bats in South America; wolves in Asia and eastern Europe;
mongooses in the Caribbean; meerkats in southern Africa;
raccoon dogs in Russia and adjacent countries.
Incubation Period
The incubation period varies with the amount of virus
transmitted, virus strain, site of inoculation (bites closer to
the head have a shorter incubation period), host immunity
and nature of the wound. In dogs and cats, the incubation
period is 10 days to six months; most cases become apparent
between two weeks and two months. In cattle, an incubation
period from 25 days to more than five months has been
reported in vampire bat-transmitted rabies.
Clinical Signs
The initial symptoms of rabies are often nonspecific
and may include apprehension, restlessness, anorexia or an
increased appetite, vomiting, a slight fever, dilation of the
pupils, hyperreactivity to stimuli, and excessive salivation.
The first sign of post-vaccinal rabies is usually lameness in
the vaccinated leg. Animals often have behavior and temperament
changes, and may either become unusually aggressive
or uncharacteristically affectionate. Pigs typically have
a very violent excitation phase at the onset of disease. These
symptoms usually last for 2 to 5 days, and may be followed
by a phase in which either the paralytic or the furious form
of rabies predominates.
The paralytic (“dumb”) form of rabies is characterized
by progressive paralysis. In this form, the throat and masseter
muscles become paralyzed; the animal may be unable to swallow
and can salivate profusely. There may be facial paralysis
or the lower jaw may drop. Ruminants may separate from the
herd, become somnolent or depressed, and rumination may
stop. Ataxia, incoordination and ascending spinal paresis or
paralysis are also typical of this form. The paralytic form of
rabies may be preceded by a brief excitatory phase, or none at
all. Biting is uncommon. Death usually occurs within 2 to 6
days, as the result of respiratory failure The furious form is associated with infection of the limbic
system, and is the predominant form in cats. It is characterized
by restlessness, wandering, howling, polypnea,
drooling and attacks on animals, people or inanimate objects.
Animals with this form often swallow foreign objects such
as sticks, stones, straw or feces. Wild animals often lose their
fear of humans and nocturnal animals may be seen in the
daylight. Cattle may appear unusually alert. Convulsions
can occur, particularly in the terminal stages. In the furious
form of rabies, death sometimes occurs during a seizure but,
in most cases, incoordination and ascending paralysis are
seen late in the disease. The animal usually dies 4 to 8 days
after the onset of symptoms.
The symptoms of rabies are rarely definitive, and it
may be difficult to distinguish the furious and dumb forms.
The most reliable clinical signs are behavioral changes and
unexplained paralysis. In some cases in cats, no behavioral
changes were noticed, and the illness appeared to begin as
ataxia or posterior weakness, followed by ascending paralysis.
Horses and mules are often distressed and extremely agitated,
which may be interpreted as colic. Laryngeal paralysis
can cause a change in vocalizations, including an abnormal
bellow in cattle or a hoarse howling in dogs. Some animals
may die within a day, without marked clinical signs. Survival
is extremely rare once the clinical signs appear.
Communicability
All species can infect humans and other animals, but the
efficiency of transmission varies with the host species and
the form of rabies. Animals with the furious form of rabies
are more likely to disseminate rabies than animals with the
paralytic form. Carnivores are also more efficient vectors, in
general, than herbivores. Herbivore-to-herbivore transmission
is uncommon. Insectivorous bats have been implicated
in most recent human cases in the U.S.
Virus shedding occurs in 50-90% of animals, depending
on the host species and the infecting strain; the amount of
virus found in the saliva varies from a trace to high titers.
Shedding can begin before the onset of clinical signs. Cats
excrete virus for 1 to 5 days before the symptoms appear,
cattle for 1 to 2 days, skunks for up to 14 days and bats
for two weeks. Virus shedding in dogs is usually said to be
limited to the 1 to 5 days before the onset of clinical signs;
however, in some experimental studies (using viruses of
Mexican or Ethiopian origin), the virus was present in the
saliva for up to 13 days before the first symptoms appeared.
Asymptomatic carriers are thought to be very rare among
domestic animals. Cases have been reported among dogs in
Ethiopia and India, including one experimentally infected dog
that recovered from rabies symptoms and carried the virus in
her saliva and tonsils, but not the brain or other organs.
Diagnostic Tests
The rabies virus is usually identified by immunofluorescence
in a brain sample. The virus can also be found in other
tissues such as the salivary gland, tactile facial hair follicles
and corneal impression smears but detection is less efficient.
Immunofluorescence can identify 98-100% of cases caused
by all genotypes of the rabies and rabies-related viruses, and
is most effective on fresh samples. Other tests to detect the
virus include immunohistochemistry and enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assays (ELISAs). The rapid rabies enzyme
immunodiagnosis (RREID) test, an ELISA, detects only
the rabies virus and not rabies-related viruses. Histology to
detect aggregates of viral material in neurons (Negri bodies)
is nonspecific and rarely used in developed countries, but
may be an important technique in less developed nations.
Electron microscopy is used in research laboratories. RTPCR-
based techniques have been published.
A single negative test does not rule out infection; therefore,
mouse inoculation or virus isolation in cell culture
(mouse neuroblastoma or baby hamster kidney cells) is
often done concurrently. Identification of variant strains is
performed in specialized laboratories with monoclonal antibodies,
specific nucleic acid probes, or RT-PCR followed by
DNA sequencing.
Serology is occasionally used in epidemiological surveys
or to test seroconversion in wildlife vaccination campaigns.
It is rarely useful for the diagnosis of clinical cases,
as the host usually dies before developing antibodies. Serological
tests include virus neutralization tests and ELISAs.
There is some cross-reactivity between the rabies virus and
rabies-related viruses.
Treatment
There is no treatment once the symptoms appear. Postexposure
vaccination protocols have not been validated in
animals, and are not recommended by most authorities.
Experimental studies suggest that post-exposure vaccination
alone will not prevent rabies in unvaccinated animals,
but vaccination combined with a monoclonal antibody may
be effective.
Prevention
In the U.S., rabies is prevented in domestic animals by
vaccination and the avoidance of contact with rabid wild
animals.
Rabies vaccines are available for dogs, cats, ferrets,
cattle, sheep and horses. Both inactivated and modified live
vaccines are effective, but rare cases of post-vaccinal rabies
have been reported with the modified live vaccines in dogs
and cats. Wild animals can be immunized with oral vaccines
distributed in bait. Conventional rabies vaccines may not
protect animals against rabies-related viruses, particularly
the Mokola virus. Preventing animals from roaming will reduce the risk
of exposure to rabid wild animals. Infected wild animals
often behave strangely, are active at unusual times of the day
or night, or attack species they would normally fear; such
wildlife should be avoided. Bats caught by cats should be
submitted for rabies testing.
To prevent the transmission of rabies to humans or other
animals, unvaccinated animals that have been exposed are
either euthanized and tested, or placed in strict isolation for
6 months, with vaccination one month before release. Vaccinated
animals are revaccinated and confined under observation
for at least 45 days. Animals with expired vaccinations
are evaluated on a case-by-case basis. Asymptomatic dogs,
cats or ferrets that have bitten humans (with no history of
exposure to rabies) are currently observed for 10 days; if the
animal develops symptoms of rabies during this time it is
euthanized and tested for rabies. Countries free of the rabies
virus may require a prolonged quarantine period before animals
can be imported.
Morbidity and Mortality
The majority of rabies cases in the U.S. occur in wildlife.
In 2001, 37% of all animal cases were reported in raccoons,
30% in skunks, 17% in bats, 6% in foxes and less
than 1% in other wild animals. Domestic animals account
for less than 10% of all cases reported annually. Vaccination
has decreased the incidence of rabies in dogs; the number of
rabid dogs reported in the U.S. dropped from 5,000 in 1946
to 338 in 1987. Currently, cats, cows, horses and captive
wild animals are more likely to develop rabies than dogs,
due to the lower vaccination rates in these species.
Factors that affect the outcome of exposure include the
virus variant, dose of virus, route and location of exposure,
and host factors such as age and immune status. Symptomatic
rabies is almost always fatal. A few, very rare, cases of
recovery after street virus or vaccine virus-induced rabies
have been reported in animals. In addition, one experimental
study reported that 8 of 47 dogs inoculated with rabies survived,
and were subsequently resistant to reinfection.
Post-Mortem Lesions
There are no characteristic gross lesions. The stomach
may contain various abnormal objects, such as sticks and
stones.
The typical histological signs, found in the central nervous
system, are multifocal, mild, polioencephalomyelitis
and craniospinal ganglionitis with mononuclear perivascular
infiltrates, diffuse glial proliferation, regressive changes in
neuronal cells, and glial nodules. Negri bodies can be seen
in some but not all cases.
References
Abelseth MK. Rabies. In: Holzworth J, editor. Diseases of
the cat. Philadelphia: WB Saunders; 1987. p. 238-241.
Acha PN, Szyfres B (Pan American Health Organization
[PAHO]). Zoonoses and communicable diseases common
to man and animals. Volume 3. Chlamydioses,
rickettsioses, and viroses. 3rd ed. Washington DC:
PAHO; 2003. Scientific and Technical Publication No.
580. Rabies; p.246-275.
Aiello SE, Mays A, editors. The Merck veterinary manual.
8th ed. Whitehouse Station, NJ: Merck and Co;
1998. Rabies; p 966-70.
Animal Health Australia. National Animal Health Information
System (NAHIS). Rabies. Available at: http://
www.aahc.com.au/nahis/disease/dislist.asp. Accessed
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