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It doesn't work... The main component of dog hair is protein, and what remains after burning is inorganic salts.
It does not have much anti-inflammatory and bactericidal effect, it is recommended to wash it with soapy water and then rub some iodine wine.
At the same time, if the wound is deeper, it is better to get a tetanus.
There is also a problem with rabies vaccine Generally, as long as the bite is not particularly serious, there is no need for special treatment, so there is no need to worry about it at all.
As for whether the rabies vaccine needs to be injected, it depends on the state of the puppy that bites you or scratches you, if the puppy is normal, healthy, and does not show any abnormalities, you do not have to worry about rabies at all. Because only dogs with rabies can transmit the rabies virus.
The dog will die within a week of the onset of the disease, so as long as the dog has scratched or bitten, behaved normally, and has not died of rabies within a week, you will not have to worry about rabies at all.
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There is no scientific basis for those local methods, and if you are bitten by a dog, please get vaccinated against rabies within 24 hours, please value your life.
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It is recommended to rinse the wound, and then normally, if the puppy is domestic, don't worry too much.
From 1 week to about 15 days, the puppy did not die.
You'll be fine.
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This is the local method you use, which may not be effective, and the best option at the moment is to get vaccinated.
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You have to get an injection, and you have to get two, a vaccine and hemoglobin.
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Home remedies, useless.
Science, science ... It's the 21st century, okay...
Speechless ...
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Wash off immediately. Dispose of after re-exposure.
Wound management: Wound cleaning and disinfection should be carried out first, promptly, and thoroughly after any exposure.
Vaccination: In general, antibody levels can be maintained for at least 1 year after full rabies vaccination. Such as again.
If the exposure occurs during the immunization process, the full course of vaccination will continue to be completed according to the original procedure, and no additional dose is required; Fully immunized.
Re-exposure within the second half of the year generally does not require re-immunization; Those who are re-exposed within half a year to 1 year after full immunization should be re-exposed at 0.
1 dose of vaccine every 3 days; Those who are re-exposed within 1-3 years should receive 1 dose of vaccine per day; Those who have been more than 3 years shall.
Fully vaccinated.
Passive immunization (serum or immunoglobulin) injections: Passive immunization is no longer required for those who have completed the full course of rabies vaccine (cell culture vaccine) according to the pre-exposure (post-exposure) schedule.
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1 Remove it immediately.
2 Go to the CDC and treat animal bites as if they were animal bites.
3 Check if there is a problem with this dog, how to keep biting.
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If you are bitten by an animal (such as a dog, cat, wolf, etc.) and you are not sure whether the animal is a healthy and non-toxic animal, you should go to the hospital in time to treat the wound, or wash the wound repeatedly and thoroughly with soap and water, so that most of the invading virus can be washed away, and then go to the health and epidemic prevention department as soon as possible to inject rabies vaccine. The sooner the vaccine is administered, the better the effect and the more likely it is to be protected.
Knowing a little bit about it might give you a little peace of mind. Rabies is terrible, but there's no need to be a snake.
Only when a dog (or other warm-blooded animal) has rabies will his teeth spread the germs.
If you are your own dog (or other warm-blooded animal), you don't need to be vaccinated at all.
If a dog (or other warm-blooded animal) does have rabies, it will die within a week, and there is basically no case where a dog does not die.
Here's what the World Health Organization has to say.
1. If you are bitten by a dog (or other warm-blooded animal) that has symptoms of disease or has abnormal behavior with a healthy dog (or other warm-blooded animal), you should get the rabies vaccine as soon as possible after you are bitten. Also observe the dog that bites you (or other warm-blooded animals that bite you), if the animal has not died of rabies within 10 days, you can stop the rabies vaccination, and you can determine that you have not been infected with rabies at all.
2.Healthy dogs (or other warm-blooded animals) are not poisonous. ("Poisonous" is a medical term that means "infectious," and "non-toxic" means that even if dogs, cats, etc., carry the rabies virus, they are not contagious until they develop the disease.) )
That is, if you are sure that your dog is healthy, you don't need to be vaccinated at all.
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There is a role.
Whether it is a cat or dog bite and scratch, it is possible to be infected with the rabies virus, as long as you see blood or **rupture, you should go to the hospital**, because there is still a lack of effective ** means for rabies, the fatality rate of people suffering from rabies is nearly 100%, and patients generally die of respiratory or circulatory failure within 3 6 days, so preventive measures should be strengthened.
Wash the wound. Immediately rinse the wound with running water to flush away the virus as much as possible and squeeze the blood out. If possible, it is best to rinse with 20% soapy water and rinse continuously for 20-30 minutes.
Then disinfect with iodine wine, and then wash off the iodine wine with alcohol, and repeat this 3 times.
Go to the local epidemic prevention department immediately to get vaccinated, and you must not delay getting vaccinated for a few days. The incubation period of rabies is as short as 10 days, and it can take several years for a long period.
If the wound is bitten severely, be sure to inject antiviral serum, at the same time as the vaccine. Antiviral serum must be tested first under the guidance of a doctor.
If you are bitten by a dog, you have to wash it with soap and water first, and then go to get an injection, but if your dog has been vaccinated, you don't need to get it again, in order to make sure, you can go to the epidemic prevention station and ask if you should get vaccinated.
Let me introduce you to the ** method, you need to prepare a bottle of saline, iodine wine, anti-inflammatory powder, syringes, needles and threads to suture the wound, cotton balls, etc. The general operation is as follows: >>>More
Just get a rabies vaccine! It's not very serious!
It can't be detected, as long as you don't have symptoms such as fear of water and sound, it is difficult to detect.
It is generally believed that once you are bitten by a dog, as long as you get the rabies vaccine, everything will be fine. In fact, this kind of over-emphasis on the protective effect of rabies vaccine is very unscientific. Some patients who have been bitten by rabies will still get the disease even though they have been vaccinated against rabies, and there are several reasons for this. >>>More