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Topic:Rabies

Rabies is a viral disease that affects the central nervous system of horses, leading to neurological symptoms and, ultimately, death. The rabies virus is transmitted through the saliva of infected animals, typically via bites. In horses, the disease can present with a variety of clinical signs, including behavioral changes, ataxia, and paralysis. Due to the rapid progression of the disease, rabies is often fatal once symptoms appear. Diagnosis is confirmed post-mortem through laboratory testing of brain tissue. Vaccination is the primary method of prevention, and it is recommended for horses in areas where rabies is endemic. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that examine the epidemiology, clinical presentation, diagnosis, and prevention strategies of rabies in equine populations.
Ovine anti-rabies antibody production and evaluation.
Comparative immunology, microbiology and infectious diseases    February 19, 2008   Volume 32, Issue 1 9-19 doi: 10.1016/j.cimid.2007.11.004
Redwan el-RM, Fahmy A, El Hanafy A, Abd El-Baky N, Sallam SM.In view of the disadvantages of human and equine rabies immunoglobulin still there is urgent needs for safe and cost-control anti-rabies immunoglobulins especially for person who have been severely exposed (categories III) to the virus. Our attempt to produce a less immunogenic and cheaper anti-rabies immunoglobulin affordable for those people living in developing countries, has been harnessed the ovine as a bioreactor instead the horse. The animals have been intramuscular immunized, and the plasma processed with 5% caprylic acid to yield IgG with purity of 95%. Moreover, antibody apparently i...
Evaluation of a new premedication protocol for administration of equine rabies immunoglobulin in patients with hypersensitivity.
Indian journal of public health    February 5, 2008   Volume 51, Issue 2 91-96 
Sudarshan MK, Kodandaram NS, Venkatesh GM, Mahendra BJ, Ashwath Narayana DH, Parasuramalu BG.The present study was undertaken to standardize skin testing and to develop a safe and effective premedication protocol for administration of ERIG in those with skin test positivity/hypersensitivity. Methods: A method of grading of skin testing was developed using injection histamine as a positive control. This was evaluated by using it on 517 subjects who had severe (WHO category III) exposure to rabies. A premedication protocol consisting of injections pheniramine, ranitidine, hydrocortisone and adrenaline was evaluated by using it on fifty one subjects who were skin test positive/hypersensi...
Purification of equine IgG using membrane based enhanced hybrid bioseparation technique: a potential method for manufacturing hyperimmune antibody.
Biotechnology and bioengineering    August 21, 2007   Volume 99, Issue 3 625-633 doi: 10.1002/bit.21614
Wang L, Sun X, Ghosh R.Hyperimmune equine IgG is widely used as antivenom and anti-rabies agents. This article discusses a membrane based enhanced hybrid bioseparation technique for efficient and scalable purification of equine immunoglobulin G (IgG) from horse serum. This technique is an improved version of a standard hybrid bioseparation technique developed within our group earlier for fractionation of human plasma proteins (Ghosh. 2004. J Membr Sci 237: 109-117). In the presence of a high antichaotropic salt concentration, equine IgG is selectively and reversibly captured within a stirred cell membrane module fro...
Rabies surveillance in the United States during 2005.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 19, 2006   Volume 229, Issue 12 1897-1911 doi: 10.2460/javma.229.12.1897
Blanton JD, Krebs JW, Hanlon CA, Rupprecht CE.During 2005, 49 states and Puerto Rico reported 6,417 cases of rabies in nonhuman animals and 1 case in a human being to the CDC, representing a 6.2% decrease from the 6,836 cases in nonhuman animals and 8 cases in human beings reported in 2004. Approximately 92% of the cases were in wildlife, and 8% were in domestic animals. Relative contributions by the major animal groups were as follows: 2,534 raccoons (39.5%), 1,478 skunks (23%), 1,408 bats (21.9%), 376 foxes (5.9%), 269 cats (4.2%), 93 cattle (1.5%), and 76 dogs (1.2%). Compared with numbers of reported cases in 2004, cases in 2005 decre...
[Epidemiological aspects of human and animal rabies in the urban area of Bamako, Mali].
Bulletin de la Societe de pathologie exotique (1990)    September 21, 2006   Volume 99, Issue 3 183-186 
Dao S, Abdillahi AM, Bougoudogo F, Toure K, Simbe C.The district of Bamako is the political and economical capital city of Mali with 1,800,000 inhabitants. The goal of the present retrospective study was to determine the frequency of animal bites, human and animal rabies on the one hand and to determine the frequency and the nature of mad animals on the other hand from January 2000 to December 2003 (4 years). To achieve this goal, we have analysed registers and documents related to rabies in the department of prevention and fight against diseases, the central veterinary laboratory, and also at the lazaret clinic involved in caring for human rab...
Laboratory diagnosis of equine rabies and its implications for human postexposure prophylaxis.
Journal of virological methods    August 21, 2006   Volume 138, Issue 1-2 1-9 doi: 10.1016/j.jviromet.2006.07.005
Carrieri ML, Peixoto ZM, Paciencia ML, Kotait I, Germano PM.Laboratory diagnosis is essential to confirm suspected cases of equine rabies and to determine the medical care needed for human postexposure antirabies prophylaxis. Equine rabies transmitted by the vampire bat, Desmodus rotundus, has increased gradually in the State of São Paulo. The present study has several objectives, the most important being the evaluation of fluorescent antibody test (FAT) and virus-isolation laboratory tests performed with different equine nervous system tissues (cortical, hippocampus, cerebellar, brainstem and cervical medullar) to determine the tissue for which the t...
RT-PCR for detection of all seven genotypes of Lyssavirus genus.
Journal of virological methods    May 19, 2006   Volume 135, Issue 2 281-287 doi: 10.1016/j.jviromet.2006.03.008
Vázquez-Morón S, Avellón A, Echevarría JE.The Lyssavirus genus includes seven species or genotypes named 1-7. Rabies genotypes correlate with geographical distribution and specific hosts. Co-circulation of different lyssaviruses, imported cases, and the presence of unknown viruses, such as Aravan, Khujand, Irkut and West Caucasian Bat Virus, make it necessary to use generic methods able to detect all lyssaviruses. Primer sequences were chosen from conserved regions in all genotypes in order to optimise a generic RT-PCR. Serial dilutions of 12 RNA extracts from all seven Lyssavirus genotypes were examined to compare the sensitivity of ...
Effect of different adjuvants in equines for the production of equine rabies immunoglobulin.
The National medical journal of India    February 18, 2006   Volume 18, Issue 6 289-292 
Arora S, Sharma S, Goel SK, Singh US.Implementation of the recommended post-exposure prophylaxis by vaccination and specific immunoglobulin therapy for rabies is largely hampered by its high cost and inadequate production. Therefore, the development and availability of an economic preparation of rabies immunoglobulin is a high priority for India, where rabies is a major cause of death. We studied the efficacy of four different adjuvants in raising antibodies to rabies antigen in older, discarded equines. Methods: Eleven equines, 23-26 years old, were divided into 4 groups to receive four different adjuvants in small amounts (1-2 ...
Importation of canid rabies in a horse relocated from Zimbabwe to South Africa.
The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research    July 5, 2005   Volume 72, Issue 1 95-100 doi: 10.4102/ojvr.v72i1.226
Sabeta CT, Randles JL.In July 2003 a 2-year-old Thoroughbred colt was imported from Harare, Zimbabwe to the Ashburton Training Centre, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa. Five months after importation, the colt presented with clinical signs suggestive of rabies: it was uncoordinated, showed muscle tremors and was biting at itself. Brain tissue was submitted for analysis and the clinical diagnosis was confirmed by the fluorescent antibody test and reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Phylogenetic analysis of the nucleotide sequence of the cytoplasmic domain of the glycoprotein and the G-L intergenic...
Rabies surveillance in the United States during 2002.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 24, 2003   Volume 223, Issue 12 1736-1748 doi: 10.2460/javma.2003.223.1736
Krebs JW, Wheeling JT, Childs JE.During 2002, 49 states and Puerto Rico reported 7,967 cases of rabies in nonhuman animals and 3 cases in human beings to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an increase of 7.2% from the 7,436 cases in non-human animals and 1 case in a human being reported in 2001. More than 92% (7,375 cases) were in wild animals, whereas 7.4% (592) were in domestic species (compared with 93.3% in wild animals and 6.7% in domestic species in 2001). Compared with cases reported in 2001, the numbers of cases reported in 2002 increased among all major reporting groups with the exception of swine and ro...
Rabies DNA vaccine in the horse: strategies to improve serological responses.
Vaccine    October 25, 2003   Volume 21, Issue 31 4593-4596 doi: 10.1016/s0264-410x(03)00504-8
Fischer L, Minke J, Dufay N, Baudu P, Audonnet JC.In order for DNA vaccines to become a practical alternative to conventional vaccines their ability to induce antibody responses in large mammals needs to be improved. We used DNA vaccination against rabies in the horse as a model to test the potential of two different strategies to enhance antibody responses in a large mammalian species. The administration of the DNA vaccine in the presence of aluminum phosphate improved both the onset and the intensity of serological responses but was not potent enough to achieve seroconversion in all vaccinated ponies. However, when the DNA vaccine was formu...
The effect of aging on immune responses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    January 9, 2003   Volume 18, Issue 3 621-ix doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(02)00027-5
Fermaglich DH, Horohov DW.Although vaccine manufacturers make no specific recommendations regarding the vaccination of older horses and ponies, the similarities in age-induced immunologic changes between human beings and equids suggests that similar vaccination recommendations should be followed. The need for vaccination of the older horse depends, of course, on the relative risk of exposure for the individual horse. Particular care should be taken when using attenuated vaccine products because these live agents may pose a unique risk to the older individual. Immunization with inactivated agent vaccines is likely to be...
Detection of rabies virus RNA isolated from several species of animals in Brazil by RT-PCR.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    January 16, 2002   Volume 63, Issue 12 1309-1313 doi: 10.1292/jvms.63.1309
Ito M, Itou T, Sakai T, Santos MF, Arai YT, Takasaki T, Kurane I, Ito FH.Brain samples from different animal species including humans: five vampire bats, 14 cattle, 12 dogs, 11 cats, two horses, one pig, one sheep and three humans collected from various geographical regions of Brazil were found to be positive for rabies by means of the fluorescent antibody test (FAT) and the mouse inoculation test (MIT). The brain samples were retested for rabies by means of the reverse transcription and polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) with 2 primer sets (P1/P2 and RHNI/RHNS3), which amplified full or partial regions on the nucleoprotein (N) gene of the rabies virus, respectivel...
Rabies surveillance in the United States during 2000.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 5, 2002   Volume 219, Issue 12 1687-1699 doi: 10.2460/javma.2001.219.1687
Krebs JW, Mondul AM, Rupprecht CE, Childs JE.During 2000, 49 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico reported 7,364 cases of rabies in nonhuman animals and 5 cases in human beings to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an increase of 4.3% from 7,067 cases in nonhuman animals reported in 1999. Ninety-three percent (6,855 cases) were in wild animals, whereas 6.9% (509 cases) were in domestic species (compared wth 91.5% in wild animals and 8.5% in domestic species in 1999). Compared with cases reported in 1999, the number of cases reported in 2000 increased among bats, dogs, foxes, skunks, and sheep/goats and decreased...
Postexposure rabies prophylaxis protocol for domestic animals and epidemiologic characteristics of rabies vaccination failures in Texas: 1995-1999.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 7, 2001   Volume 218, Issue 4 522-525 doi: 10.2460/javma.2001.218.522
Wilson PJ, Clark KA.To determine whether postexposure rabies prophylaxis (PEP) in domestic animals, as mandated by the state of Texas, has continued to be effective and to evaluate PEP and preexposure rabies vaccination failures from 1995 through 1999. Methods: Retrospective study. Methods: 830 unvaccinated domestic animals (621 dogs, 78 horses, 71 cats, and 60 cattle) that received PEP and 4 animals (3 dogs and 1 horse) that had preexposure rabies vaccination failure. Methods: Zoonotic incident case reports from 1995 through 1999 were reviewed for information regarding unvaccinated domestic animals that received...
Rabies surveillance in the United States during 1999.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 2, 2001   Volume 217, Issue 12 1799-1811 doi: 10.2460/javma.2000.217.1799
Krebs JW, Rupprecht CE, Childs JE.During 1999, 49 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico reported 7,067 cases of rabies in nonhuman animals to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a decrease of 11.2% from 7,961 cases in nonhuman animals and 1 case in a human being reported in 1998. More than 91% (6,466 cases) were in wild animals, whereas 8.5% (601 cases) were in domestic species (compared with 92.4% in wild animals and 7.6% in domestic species in 1998). No cases of rabies were reported in human beings in 1999. Decreases were evident in all major species groups, with the exception of cattle, sheep/goats, ...
Rabies surveillance in the United States during 1998.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 29, 1999   Volume 215, Issue 12 1786-1798 
Krebs JW, Smith JS, Rupprecht CE, Childs JE.During 1998, 49 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico reported 7,961 cases of rabies in nonhuman animals and 1 case in a human being to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a decrease of 6.5% from 8,509 cases in nonhuman animals and 4 cases in human beings reported in 1997. More than 92% (7,358 cases) were in wild animals, whereas > 7.5% (603 cases) were in domestic species (compared with 93% in wild animals and 7% in domestic species in 1997). Decreases were evident in all of the major contributing species groups, with the exception of skunks and bats. The relative cont...
BERNA: a century of immunobiological innovation.
Vaccine    October 3, 1999   Volume 17 Suppl 2 S1-S5 doi: 10.1016/s0264-410x(99)00228-5
Cryz SJ.At the time the Swiss Serum and Vaccine Institute Berne (BERNA) was found in 1898, few vaccines or immune globulins were available. This short list included vaccines against cholera, typhoid fever, plague, smallpox and rabies and equine anti-tetanus and diphtheria immune globulins. Furthermore, their use was restricted due to limited production capacity, uncertainty regarding safety and no public health infrastructure to promote their utilization. Today, safe and effective vaccines exist for more than 30 infectious diseases while human hyperimmune globulins exist to treat or prevent rabies, te...
Equine antirabies serum treatment during an epizootic outbreak in the city of Ribeirão Preto, Brazil.
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene    September 24, 1999   Volume 93, Issue 1 106-107 doi: 10.1016/s0035-9203(99)90201-8
Warrell MJ, Warrell DA.No abstract available
Suppressant effect of human or equine rabies immunoglobulins on the immunogenicity of post-exposure rabies vaccination under the 2-1-1 regimen: a field trial in Indonesia. MAS054 Clinical Investigator Group.
Bulletin of the World Health Organization    December 30, 1998   Volume 76, Issue 5 491-495 
Lang J, Simanjuntak GH, Soerjosembodo S, Koesharyono C.WHO's reference protocol for post-exposure rabies vaccination advises five intramuscular injections on days 0, 3, 7, 14, and 30; in addition, rabies immunoglobulins (RIG) must be given to serious cases of exposure (grade III severity). Some studies indicate that these immunoglobulins suppress the immunogenicity of rabies vaccine when administered according to an alternative protocol of four injections (2-1-1) on days 0, 7, and 21, which was therefore not recommended for grade III exposures. To test this effect, we conducted a multicentre study in Indonesia using three groups of subjects. One g...
Rabies prophylaxis following the feeding of a rabid pony.
Clinical pediatrics    September 8, 1998   Volume 37, Issue 8 477-481 doi: 10.1177/000992289803700803
Feder HM, Nelson RS, Cartter ML, Sadre I.A survey was performed to identify people who were exposed to a rabid pony and determine whether or not they received rabies postexposure prophylaxis (PEP). Sixty-one visitors who came in contact with the rabid pony were identified. These visitors heard about the rabid pony via the news media. Forty-five visitors were exposed during the 2 weeks before the pony died. Thirty-two of these 45 visitors received PEP. Thirty-one visitors had or may have had saliva contact to an open wound or mucosa and all 31 received PEP. Fourteen visitors had no saliva contact to a wound or mucosa and one received ...
Intrinsic, management, and nutritional factors associated with equine motor neuron disease.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    November 28, 1997   Volume 211, Issue 10 1261-1267 
de la Rúa-Domènech R, Mohammed HO, Cummings JF, Divers TJ, de Lahunta A, Summers BA.To identify intrinsic, management, nutritional, and environmental risk factors associated with equine motor neuron disease (EMND) and to determine whether epidemiologic evidence supports oxidative stress as a risk factor for developing EMND. Methods: Case-control study. Methods: 87 horses with EMND and 259 control horses. Methods: Information concerning each horse's history of exposure to multiple environmental factors prior to developing EMND was obtained by means of a questionnaire or personal interview. Exposure histories of horses with EMND and control horses were compared, and the associa...
Persistent penile prolapse associated with acute blood loss and acepromazine maleate administration in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 18, 1997   Volume 211, Issue 5 587-589 
Nie GJ, Pope KC.Prolonged penile prolapse in horses has been reported in association with administration of phenothiazine tranquilizers, trauma, neuropathies, severe general debilitation or exhaustion, starvation, rabies, herpes myeloencephalitis, equine infectious anemia, and purpura hemorrhagica. A 5-year-old gelding was admitted for treatment of prolonged penile prolapse of 12 days' duration that developed after acepromazine maleate was administered to allow examination of a laceration that had resulted in severe blood loss. The horse was sedated, and the penis was replaced in the preputial cavity by use o...
First reported case of rabies in a horse in Sri Lanka.
The Ceylon medical journal    June 1, 1997   Volume 42, Issue 2 106 
Wimalaratne O, Nanayakkara S.No abstract available
Heterologous antisera and antivenins are essential biologicals: perspectives on a worldwide crisis.
Annals of internal medicine    August 1, 1996   Volume 125, Issue 3 233-236 doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-125-3-199608010-00012
Wilde H, Thipkong P, Sitprija V, Chaiyabutr N.Active immunization against infectious disease is important. However, much of our world faces poverty, social injustice, and warfare, all of which cause universal immunization to remain a distant dream. Agents that provide passive immunity thus remain essential biologicals. The most important of these are human or equine antisera against rabies, tetanus, diphtheria, and snake antivenins. Homologous products are either unavailable or unaffordable in places where they are needed the most. Less expensive heterologous (equine) antisera can be purified and are safe to use, but these antisera are al...
Clinical presentation of experimentally induced rabies in horses.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    July 1, 1996   Volume 43, Issue 5 277-285 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1996.tb00315.x
Hudson LC, Weinstock D, Jordan T, Bold-Fletcher NO.Twelve naive and nine test-vaccinated horses which developed clinical signs of rabies as a result of the required protocol of a vaccine trial were prospectively observed. Nineteen of the 21 cases were confirmed positive for rabies infection of the brain by fluorescent antibody test. The two horses with negative results had ganglioneuritis of the trigeminal ganglion or lymphocytic perivascular cuffing in the brain stem in addition to clinical signs. Average incubation period was 12.3 days and average morbidity was 5.5 days. Naive animals had significantly shorter incubation and morbidity period...
Leukoencephalomalacia and hemorrhage in the brain of rabbits gavaged with mycotoxin fumonisin B1.
Natural toxins    January 1, 1996   Volume 4, Issue 1 51-52 doi: 10.1002/19960401nt7
Bucci TJ, Hansen DK, LaBorde JB.Two of five pregnant rabbits gavaged with purified fumonisin B1 at 1.75 mg/kg/day died, one after 9 and one after 13 doses. Microscopic examination revealed focal small hemorrhages in cerebral white matter in both animals, with malacia and hemorrhage also present in the hippocampus of one. The lesions were bilateral. Both animals also had marked degeneration of renal tubule epithelium and of hepatocytes. Apoptosis was the dominant degenerative change in kidney and liver. Fumonisin is known to cause leukoencephalomalacia and hemorrhage in equines, but CNS changes associated with exposure to fum...
Value of skin testing for predicting reactions to equine rabies immune globulin.
Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America    September 1, 1995   Volume 21, Issue 3 660-662 doi: 10.1093/clinids/21.3.660
Tantawichien T, Benjavongkulchai M, Wilde H, Jaijaroensup W, Siakasem A, Chareonwai S, Yountong C, Sitprija V.The high cost of postexposure prophylaxis for rabies is one reason that treatment is inadequate in developing countries. This problem has kindled interest in the use of equine rabies immune globulin, which is a less expensive, yet effective, substitute for human rabies immune globulin. Fatal anaphylaxis is a feared complication of the administration of heterologous serum; therefore, authoritative sources recommend prior skin testing. However, recommendations for methods of administering such a skin test and for its interpretation vary greatly. We embarked on a long-term study to develop guidel...
Treatment of aplastic anemia with an investigational antilymphocyte serum prepared in rabbits.
The American journal of the medical sciences    December 1, 1994   Volume 308, Issue 6 338-343 doi: 10.1097/00000441-199412000-00005
Stein RS, Means RT, Krantz SB, Flexner JM, Greer JP.The authors evaluated antilymphocyte serum prepared in rabbits (ALS-R) as an alternative to antilymphocyte serum prepared in horses (ALG-H) in the therapy of aplastic anemia. Between 1980 and 1993, 57 evaluable patients received ALS-R and prednisone +/- cyclosporine +/- androgens. Standard response criteria were used and patients were evaluated at 3 months from the start of therapy. Median age was 43 years. Disease was present for up to 2 months in 24 patients, 2-5 months in 14 patients, and 6 months or more in 19 patients. Disease was severe in 30 patients and moderate in 27. Responses occurr...
Comparative aspects of the strength of pulmonary capillaries in rabbit, dog, and horse.
Respiration physiology    July 1, 1994   Volume 97, Issue 2 235-246 doi: 10.1016/0034-5687(94)90029-9
Birks EK, Mathieu-Costello O, Fu Z, Tyler WS, West JB.In previous studies of rabbit and dog lung, we demonstrated stress failure of pulmonary capillaries at high transmural pressures (Ptm). The Ptm necessary to elicit stress failure was 40 cmH2O higher in dog than rabbit, and the total blood-gas barrier (BGB) thickness was greater in dog than rabbit. This suggests that stress failure may be related to BGB thickness, and is consistent with the Laplace relationship which states that wall stress is proportional to capillary radius but inversely proportional to wall thickness. In the present studies, we compared BGB thickness and an index of capillar...