Overview, Prevention, and Treatment of Rabies

Each year, approximately 55,000 individuals worldwide die from an infection due to the rabies virus. Rabies is a life‐threatening disease caused by an RNA virus that is usually transmitted to humans through bites from rabid animals. More recently, reports of transmission by means of organ transplant...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pharmacotherapy 2009-10, Vol.29 (10), p.1182-1195
Hauptverfasser: Nigg, Andrea Julia, Walker, Pamela L.
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description Each year, approximately 55,000 individuals worldwide die from an infection due to the rabies virus. Rabies is a life‐threatening disease caused by an RNA virus that is usually transmitted to humans through bites from rabid animals. More recently, reports of transmission by means of organ transplantation have been reported. Since human rabies is nearly 100% fatal if prophylactic measures are not followed, an increased awareness of who should receive prophylaxis and when prophylaxis should be administered is necessary. Preexposure prophylaxis entails the administration of the rabies vaccine to individuals at high risk for exposure to rabies viruses (e.g., laboratory workers who handle infected specimens, diagnosticians, veterinarians, animal control workers, rabies researchers, cave explorers). Preexposure prophylaxis involves a three‐dose series of the rabies vaccine that may confer some protection from the virus while simplifying postexposure prophylaxis regimens. Postexposure prophylaxis consists of a multimodal approach to decrease an individual's likelihood of developing clinical rabies after a possible exposure to the virus. Regimens depend on the vaccination status of the victim and involve a combination of wound cleansing, administration of the rabies vaccine, and administration of human rabies immune globulin. If used in a timely and accurate fashion, postexposure prophylaxis is nearly 100% effective. Once clinical manifestations of rabies have developed, however, treatment options for rabies are limited, and to date, only seven individuals have survived rabies virus infection. Treatment of clinical rabies consists of medical support in an intensive care unit, using a multifaceted approach that includes supportive care, heavy sedation, analgesics, anticonvulsants, and antivirals. The recently developed Milwaukee Protocol added induction of therapeutic coma to supportive care measures and antivirals; however, its use has shown inconsistent outcomes.
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Rabies is a life‐threatening disease caused by an RNA virus that is usually transmitted to humans through bites from rabid animals. More recently, reports of transmission by means of organ transplantation have been reported. Since human rabies is nearly 100% fatal if prophylactic measures are not followed, an increased awareness of who should receive prophylaxis and when prophylaxis should be administered is necessary. Preexposure prophylaxis entails the administration of the rabies vaccine to individuals at high risk for exposure to rabies viruses (e.g., laboratory workers who handle infected specimens, diagnosticians, veterinarians, animal control workers, rabies researchers, cave explorers). Preexposure prophylaxis involves a three‐dose series of the rabies vaccine that may confer some protection from the virus while simplifying postexposure prophylaxis regimens. 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subjects Animals
antivirals
Biological and medical sciences
HRIG
human rabies
human rabies immune globulin
Human viral diseases
Humans
immunizations
Immunoglobulins - administration & dosage
Immunoglobulins - immunology
Infectious diseases
Medical sciences
Milwaukee Protocol
Pharmacology. Drug treatments
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Rabies - diagnosis
Rabies - immunology
Rabies - prevention & control
Rabies - transmission
rabies vaccine
Rabies Vaccines - immunology
Rabies Vaccines - therapeutic use
rabies virus
Rabies virus - immunology
Viral diseases
Viral diseases of the nervous system
title Overview, Prevention, and Treatment of Rabies
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