Can rabies spread from person to person? Include any avenue

Updated on healthy 2024-02-09
9 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Normal contact with this person is not contagious. If the person is vaccinated in time, the person is still dangerous, but it is not contagious.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    In general, the rabies virus is mainly transmitted to humans through animal bites or saliva and other bodies such as imperial fluid. There have been no cases where the rabies virus can be transmitted from person to person. As a result, the rabies virus is not usually transmitted directly from one person to another.

    However, if a person is infected with the rabies virus and their saliva or finger stool blood enters the body of another person, then another person can also be infected with the rabies virus. This usually occurs when the saliva or blood of an infected person comes into contact with another person's mucous membranes after an infected animal bites. Therefore, if you have been bitten or come into contact with an animal that may carry the rabies virus, it is very important to receive timely vaccinations and**.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    The rabies virus is mainly transmitted to humans through animal bites or saliva, rather than directly from one person to another. Although there have been rare reports of rabies virus infection through organ transplantation, laboratory accidents, etc., these cases are very rare. Therefore, in general, unless an infected animal has bitten or scratched the surface of the body**, and preventive vaccination and ** measures are not carried out in a timely manner, there will be no human-to-human communication in the case of ordinary disappointment.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Rabies is a disease caused by the rabies virus that is usually transmitted to humans through the saliva of infected animals such as dogs, cats, etc. Although rabies is mainly transmitted through animal bites, it has been reported in very rare cases that rabies virus can be transmitted through close contact between people or through organ transplantation. However, this situation is extremely rare, and in most cases the rabies virus is still transmitted to humans through animals, so in terms of rabies prevention, it is still necessary to strengthen the management and control of pet dogs, cats and other animals, and receive rabies vaccination in time after being bitten to avoid infection.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Rabies virus, if someone is infected, the disease will also infect people, so if you are scratched by a dog, you must get vaccinated in time.

  6. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Rabies is transmitted in three main ways on a daily basis:

    1 The most important mode of infection: the virus passes through the broken **. The rabies virus cannot be infected by intact **, and according to statistics, the infection caused by the bite of a dog or other animal accounts for 90% of the infection, and the infection rate of the virus in the saliva after scratching** is 1 in 50 of the bite, and the chance of mucosal invasion is even smaller.

    2 Accidentally stab the hand during slaughtering or skinning, because the hand is wounded, and the broken nerve tissue in the meat of rabies animals may contain the virus, causing the virus to invade the wound and become infected.

    3 Gastrointestinal infection. Animals that die of rabies are buried in the ground, frozen in winter, picked up by wild dogs or other animals, eaten meat, and infected with rabies.

    It is also possible for people to become infected through the mucous membrane of the digestive tract (this is very rare) when they eat the meat of rabies-infected animals, but there is no chance that the meat will be cooked.

    Other ways of infection:

    There is also a way to infect the virus, which cannot be infected in a natural environment. This is called "end-of-flight infection", and such infection can only occur in a laboratory environment where the concentration of rabies virus is very high.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    1. Rabies is an infectious disease caused by rabies virus;

    2. Through scratching and biting, the virus spreads among wild mammals (such as foxes, wolves, hyenas, raccoons, badgers, ferrets, bats and rodents, etc.), among which hyenas can carry the virus for a long time without symptoms;

    3. Wild mammals infect dogs, cats, pigs, cattle and other domestic animals, and finally humans.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    The rabies virus is mainly found in the saliva of infected animals, so rabies is mainly transmitted through bites. Some animals often lick their paws, and their paws can also carry the virus, so rabies can also be contracted through animal scratches. It should be done because of the severity of the damage caused by the rabies virus.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Humans usually contract rabies after being deeply bitten or scratched by an infected animal, and 99% of human cases of rabies are transmitted from rabid dogs to humans. Africa and Asia face the heaviest human burden of rabies, accounting for 95% of all rabies deaths worldwide.

    Canine transmission has been largely curbed in the Americas, and bats are now the leading cause of rabies deaths in humans in the Americas. Bat rabies has also recently become a public health threat in Australia and Western Europe. Human mortality due to contact with foxes, raccoons, skunks, jackals, mongooses, and other carnivorous wild hosts is extremely rare.

    In addition, no cases of rabies following rodent bites are known.

    The disease can also be transmitted through direct contact with the mucous membranes of the human body with an infectious substance (usually saliva) or through a newly broken lesion. Human-to-human transmission from bites is a theoretical possibility, but it has never been proven.

    Infection with rabies by inhalation of aerosols containing virus particles or by transplantation of infected organs is rare. Human infection with rabies through ingestion of raw animal meat or other tissues has never been proven.

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Normally, no, the incubation period of rabies virus is very long, usually 15 to 20 years I have been bitten by dogs, but it has been more than 20 years It's okay Don't worry, don't worry, it's going to be fine! And good luck!!