Generalities | ||
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Agent | Rabies virus, genus Lyssavirus, family Rhabdoviridae | |
Incubation period | 3-8 weeks (few days to several years) | |
Period of transmissibility | - Rabid dogs/cats are infectious 3-7 days before onset and up to death. - Rabid bats are infectious 12 days before onset and up to death. - Person-to-person transmission is possible but have never been confirmed. |
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Reservoir | - Wild and domestic cannidae (dogs, foxes, wolves) and other carnivores (cats...) - In some countries: bats |
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Modes of transmission | - Usually: virus-laden saliva of rabid animal introduced through wound (scratch, bite, existing wound) - Possible: mucous membranes (eyes, nose, mouth) contaminated with saliva - Airborne in cave with rabid bats |
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Clinical presentation | Encephalomyelitis, with hydrophobia, fatal within 1-2 weeks from onset | |
Resources | ||
Case definitions | - MOPH circular no. 109 (2006): Human rabies - MOPH circular no. 50 (2005): Rabies exposure |
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Forms | - General reporting form - Rabies investigation form - Exposure investigation form |
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Data on Human rabies | Refer to "Surveillance Data" | |
Data on Rabies Exposure | The data reflects the exposed persons managed by anti-rabies centers: - Year 2016 - Year 2015 - Year 2014 - Year 2013 - Year 2012 - Year 2011 - Year 2010 |