1 / 31

Rabies

Rabies. Rabies is the most lethal of all infectious diseases. Even the most extreme modern medical interventions are usually not successful. The disease was recognized in Egypt before 2300 B.C. and in ancient Greece, where it was described by Aristotle.

pippa
Download Presentation

Rabies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Rabies

  2. Rabies is the most lethal of all infectious diseases. • Even the most extreme modern medical interventions are usually not successful. • The disease was recognized in Egypt before 2300 B.C. and in ancient Greece, where it was described by Aristotle. • The method of transmission of rabies was not recognized until 1804. • Rabies is thought to be responsible for the origin of vampire legends (bats, biting, hypersexuality are associated with rabies).

  3. Rhabdoviridae: A large number of member viruses that are serologically unrelated. • Rabies belongs to the genus lyssa virus (rabies in Greek means mad or frenzy). • It is bullet shaped, enveloped and has a diameter of 75X180 nm.

  4. Rabies Virus G, M, L, N, and NS Proteins

  5. transmission • Rabies is transmitted by rabid animals that have the virus in their saliva. • Bites or licks of a rabid animal transmit rabies. • Rabies can be transmitted by moisture droplets in the air. • Unusual modes of transmission (inhalation, aerosoles, ingestion, and corneal and other transplants).

  6. Ulceroglandular disease

  7. Pathogenesis • Exact pathogenic mechanisms are not fully understood. • Following the bite or a lick of a rabid animal, local multiplication takes place in striated muscles. • Virus attaches at neuromuscular junctions via the acetylcholine receptor. • Retrograde axoplasmic transport to the spinal cord.

  8. The virus reaches the brain and a wide disseminated encephalitis develops. • Little discernable damage and very little histopathologic changes. • Cytoplasmic inclusions (Negri bodies) are detectable in infected cells. • Centrifugal dissemination of virus via afferent neurons to highly innervated sites.

  9. CDC

  10. Rabies Virus (Rhabdovirus) Figure 22.12

  11. Clinical Features • Incubation- mean 30-90 d; range 5days-7years • Stages: incubation, prodrome, acute neurologic period, coma and death or very rarely recovery. • The prodromal phase is characterized by flu-like manifestations, malaise, headache, fever and a profound sense of apprehension and feeling of irritation with paraesthesia at the wound site. • There are complaints of dry throat, cough and thirst but patients will not drink.

  12. Difficulty in swallowing and revulsion of water (hydrophobia). • Other manifestations include; photophobia, priapism, increased lipido, insomnia, nightmares and depression. • Frank manifestations of encephalitis including; bizarre behavior, excitement, agitation, hallucinatory seizures, laryngeal spasm, chocking and gagging intermingled with lucid intervals. • This state gradually subsides into delirium, convulsions, coma and death.

  13. Signs of rabies in animals • Two clinical forms; furious rabies and dumb or paralytic rabies. • Unusual behavior • Wild animals that appear friendly • Nocturnal animals active during the day • An increase in drool or saliva • Animals that act very sick or mean • Animals that have difficulty moving or are dead

  14. Laboratory Diagnosis • LP, imaging: nonspecific, antibodies: appear late • Identification of rabies antigen by DFA (Salivary, corneal or conjunctival smears or biopsy of neck nape >5 days, 2/3 +). • PCR saliva for rabies- > 5days • Virus Isolation: from saliva or CSF • Serology: ELISA

  15. Diagnosis of Rabies Negri Body in neuron cell (source: CDC) Positive DFA test (Source: CDC)

  16. Prognosis and Treatment • Death from asphyxia, exhaustion, or general paralysis usually occurs within 3 to 10 days after onset of symptoms. • However, recovery of one patient has occurred after aggressive, vigorous, supportive treatment to control respiratory, circulatory, and CNS symptoms. • If rabies develops, treatment is symptomatic. • The case fatality ratio approaches unity. Consultation should be sought to assist in management.

  17. Treatments: old myths to cure rabies • Eating liver of a rabid dog. • Eating a paste made from the eyes of a crayfish. • Drenching wound with acid or burning area with a red hot iron. • Sprinkling wound with gun powder and lighting it.

  18. Management • Proper care of wounds • Immunoprophylaxis (Rabies human immunoglobulin) • Vaccination as soon you the patient is bitten (HDCV at 0, 3, 7, 14, 28 and 90 days after exposure). • Putting patient on respirator and maintaining support of vital functions. • Reality: Once the virus attacks the brain, family should organize the funeral because the patient is going to DIE.

  19. Rabies Vaccines for Humans • Inactivated whole virus vaccines are available for humans. • Nervous Tissue Preparations are associated with the rare complication of demyelinating allergic encephalitis. • Duck Embryo Vaccine is grown in embryonated duck eggs. The vaccine has a lower risk of allergic encephalitis but is considerably less immunogenic

  20. Human Diploid Cell Vaccine (HDCV) - this is currently the best vaccine available with an efficacy rate of nearly 100% and rarely any severe reactions. However it is very expensive. • Other Cell culture Vaccines - because of the expense of HDCV, other cell culture vaccines are being developed for the developing countries. • However recent data suggests that a much reduced dose of HDCV given intradermally may be just be effective.

  21. Epidemiology • 35.000-50.000 cases are reported annually worldwide with the highest numbers in Asia, particularly in India. In Asia 90% of cases result from dog bites. • UK, Japan, Cyprus, Iceland, Australia, Taiwan and Hawaii are rabies-free • Among animals the disease may spread via two pathways, urban and sylvatic. • Urban mode: among domestic dogs and cats, a situation prevailing in the third world. • Sylvatic mode: Foxes ( Europe, Canada and Northern USA), Raccoons ( Eastern seaboard, USA), Skunks (Southern USA), Mongoose (West Indies)

  22. Animal Rabies in the USA is Common (n=7560*) * Current 5 year mean value Usually 1-3 human cases per year

  23. Dogs - especially stray & unvaccinated

  24. Cats - especially stray and unvaccinated

  25. Raccoon Striped Skunk Red Fox Silver tailed Bat Raccoons, Skunks, Foxes and Bats Are Major Rabies Reservoirs

  26. Mammals that are less likely to carry rabies

  27. Animals that don’t carry rabies

  28. Control • Rabies has been controlled among dogs in the developed countries by vaccination. • Control of stray dogs and cats and dissemination of vaccine virus among animals is very important. • Vaccination of groups at risk; Lab. workers, those who handle animals (Zoo workers, vets, quarantine workers, hunters), and those traveling to endemic areas. • Wildlife - Rabies in wild animals is much more difficult to control than canine rabies. However, on-going trials in the USA and Europe using bait containing rabies vaccine given to foxes and raccoons reduces rabies levels.

More Related