C203 Rabies and Other Rhabdovirus Infections

Rabies

Etiologic agent

Epidemiology

Pathogenesis

FIGURE 203-3
Schematic representation of events in rabies pathogenesis following peripheral inoculation of rabies virus by an animal bite.

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Binds to nicotinic acetylcholine receptor at NMJ -> replicates locally within the muscle tissue -> travels retrograde.

Clinical manifestations

Incubation period is usually 1-3 months, but animals that are contagious (ie, have rabies virus in their saliva) will be symptomatic 5-10 days after becoming contagious.

Prodrome 1?~1?Fever, headache, N/V, lethargy
Acute neurologic phase1?~1?Confusion, delirium, hallucination
Coma, death  

Prodromal features

Ecephalitic rabies

  • Hydrophobia
    • Painful pharyngeal spasms ? avoidance of water
  • Autonomic dysfunction
    • Pupil dilation
    • Hypersalivation; drooling
  • Paresthesia
    • Radiating proximally from a known wound site

Paralytic rabies

Laboratory investigations

Diagnosis

Rabies virus-specific antibodies

RT-PCR amplification

Direct fluorescent antibody testing

Differential diagnosis

Treatment

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Prognosis

Prevention

Postexposure prophylaxis

PEP is painful, costly, and intense (4 visits)

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  • ????: HRIG(????) + Vaccination (inactivated vaccine)
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Preexposure rabies vaccination

Other rhabdoviruses

Other Lyssaviruses

Vesicular stomatitis virus

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