What are the chances of being caught by a rat and contracting rabies and hemorrhagic fever?

Updated on healthy 2024-06-27
21 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    Me too, I'm a wound stuck with rat saliva.

    The Shenzhen epidemic prevention station said that there is no hemorrhagic fever vaccine, I am very worried, I checked it, and it is very strange on the encyclopedia that there is no hemorrhagic fever in China at present, and there is no vaccine. On the wiki it's the opposite.

    The interactive encyclopedia says that hemorrhagic fever is the same.

    But. The chance of getting rabies may not be very high, 1%, but if you dare to try, you can try.

    There are regional differences in haemorrhagic fevers, with high infection rates in some places and low infection rates in others...

    Anyway, both of them have a very high mortality rate, and both of them may add up to a low probability, so if you want to save this 1,000 yuan, let's try your luck.

    The odds of surviving are high anyway...

    I'm going to fight.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    It's not big, plague and rabies are probably less than 20%, now that medicine is developed, it's okay to get vaccinated, don't worry too much, just get treated.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Rats generally don't have rabies, it has to have a mad dog bite the cat first, the cat is not bitten to death, bite the mouse during the onset of the disease, the mouse is not bitten to death, and then the mouse bites you during the onset of the disease, you can get rabies. Not to mention that you weren't bitten by a rat. Don't be suspicious.

    If you were told that rabid dogs like to bite strange things, such as chair trunks, if you have a wound on your hand and touch undried saliva, you can get rabies.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    I don't know how likely the plague is, but the probability of rabies virus is about 20 percent, and even if there is no bleeding, it is possible, but it is probably small.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    The cat ate the rat raw. Why aren't you afraid and won't get the diseases you mentioned? The chances of getting vaccinated or not are the same, and the wild animals in nature have not been vaccinated, and there is no outbreak of this disease and extinction, which is a good testimony.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    My grandmother was bitten by a mouse when she was a child, and she was bleeding. As a result, he is still alive today.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    The incidence of human bites by rats (rodents) is high, accounting for 3 10 of all animal bites (80% of 90 dog bites).

    On the question of whether rabies vaccination is required for rat bites, the prevailing view in China is that vaccination should be given, while the World Health Organization (WHO) has a very different view.

    The 2004 First Report of the WHO Expert Consultation on Rabies made a special reference to rabies in rodents: "Examinations of thousands of wild and residential rodents in rabies-endemic areas of North America and Europe have shown that rabies infection in rodents is rare, suggesting that these animals are not reservoirs for the disease.

    The document specifically states in the guidance on rabies post-exposure prophylaxis: "Specific anti-rabies post-exposure prophylaxis is rarely required after exposure to rodents, rabbits, and hares.

    That is, if you are bitten by a rat, you usually do not need to be vaccinated against rabies.

    In the United States, with the exception of large rodents such as marmots, which are occasionally infected with rabies, there has not been a single positive case in small rodents (mainly mice) during the 20-year surveillance period, and no cases of rat-borne rabies have been recorded.

    The U.S. Department of Disease Control and Prevention does not classify rats as rabies risk animals.

    There are occasional statistical reports of rat-borne rabies cases in Chinese literature, but the identification of injured animals depends on the oral recollection of patients or their families, and their scientificity needs to be verified, and the number is not large.

    Based on the data and research I have collected over the years, I believe that the above views of the WHO are basically applicable to China.

    In particular, rat bites in non-priority epidemic areas are very unlikely to develop rabies, and rat bites usually do not require rabies vaccination.

    Rats are highly susceptible to artificial rabies infection.

    Rats are an extremely convenient experimental animal model of rabies.

    However, in nature, rats are not the reservoir of rabies, i.e. rabies transmission cannot be maintained within a rat colony.

    If a rat gets rabies, it can only be caused by occasional bites from other animals.

    The natural reservoir of rabies is mainly carnivores, while rats are too small to have a chance to develop slowly after being attacked by large animals.

    In the human living environment, rabies infection in rats can only be bitten by a rabid dog or mad cat.

    Rats are nocturnal animals and usually hide in their burrows during the day.

    Imagine a rat being bitten by a mad dog (or mad cat), then escaping and surviving for a few more days until it becomes ill, and then has the chance to bite a person.

    The probability of each part of this series of events occurring is very small, and the probability of all of them eventually happening is close to zero.

    So the effect of rats on rabies epidemics is negligible.

    As for the disposal of rat bites, only the WHO has the above-mentioned clear guidelines, and the Ministry of Health of China has not yet issued relevant work specifications.

    Considering that China has a high incidence of rabies, there are occasional reports of rat-borne rabies, and it is difficult to track the rats, it is recommended that patients weigh whether they need to be vaccinated against rabies while informing them of the above facts.

    Ask. I've already beaten it, but I'm afraid that I'll be fine, and I'll be okay if I'm done.

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    What are the chances of getting epidemic hemorrhagic fever if I am bitten by a rat?

    ask120473525b | 2010-09-21

    Share a description of the condition:

    I was bitten by a rat five days ago, and I was squeezed with blood and washed with soap and water, and I went to get the tetanus vaccine that night, and the next day I got the madness vaccine and the epidemic hemorrhagic fever vaccine, I want to ask what are the chances of getting epidemic hemorrhagic fever?

    How can I get help:

    I would like to know what I should be aware of in the near future and what kind of situation will arise.

    Consult a specialist by disease.

    Rat bites tetanus.

    Disease analysis: The probability you said is not easy to say, it depends on whether the mouse carries the epidemic hemorrhagic fever virus, and the virus enters the body depends on how your immunity is, and if the immunity is strong, it will not be infected.

    Guidance: However, brown rats are indeed carriers of epidemic hemorrhagic fever virus, and it is best to get a shot of the vaccine just in case. I haven't paid special attention to it recently, pay more attention to my body, and seek medical attention as soon as possible if I feel unwell.

    The patient asked. Thank you for your answer! I've already been vaccinated once, is it safe? There is also a hearing that this has an incubation period, I read it from the Internet is not the same, I want to verify, how long it will be fine if you don't have symptoms, and there are children at home, if I carry the virus, will I contact the child will not be transmitted to the child, the doctor replied:

    As long as you get vaccinated, you'll be fine. The incubation period is 4 to 46 days, usually one to two weeks. If you carry the virus, close contact is contagious.

  9. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Time is limited, and medicine will not save you.

  10. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    No matter what the odds are, the first thing to do is to get an injection, and life matters, right?

  11. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Being bitten by a dog does not necessarily lead to rabies, and there are different probabilities for different parts.

  12. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    You can rest assured that I will analyze it for you, don't worry.

    1. First of all, you have completed the rabies vaccine, the rabies vaccine is valid for 6 months, and you don't have to worry about being bitten again after a month.

    2. Secondly, this incident happened 8 years ago. The incubation period of rabies is generally 30-90 days, and generally never exceeds 1 year, except for a few cases of 6 years. There is no medical basis for saying that it has been going on for more than ten years, or even decades.

    A situation like yours can basically be ruled out, and you have another injection.

    3. Finally, the symptoms of rabies do not lie in the pain and itching of the wound. It is an attack on the nervous system, which will cause extreme excitement, muscle spasms, difficulty breathing, and finally deep coma, and thus failure and death. There are several stages of the disease.

    It usually takes less than 10 days for a rabies patient to die.

    Hope this helps you, typing is hard work, haha.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    There are only 2 cases of rabies virus outbreak in the world for more than 1 year, and although 1 case has been incubated for 20 years, what do you think are the chances of you becoming a third person? If it does happen, I don't think I can wait for you to ask for help online. And if you are repeatedly bitten by an animal within half a year, you only need to get vaccinated once.

    Hehe, so you don't have to worry about it at all.

    In your case, there is a great possibility of psychological effects, personal hygiene, and seasonal changes.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Support the third floor, what he said is very reasonable, and the information I have found in the past six months is very stable. . .

    Scold...

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    It is best to go to the hospital for a check-up, as rats will not get rabies if bitten, but they will be infected with other diseases.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    It's fine, I've been bitten many times and I'm fine.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Tip: Ask your local CDC if you should be vaccinated against epidemic haemorrhagic fever. (First determine if it was bitten by a rat)?

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    I also got a rat bite last year! Generally, wash the wound with water, squeeze out the blood inside, and do a disinfection to generally be fine!

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    Absolutely not, can a rat survive even if it is bitten by a mad dog?

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    Diseases that are often transmitted by rats are hemorrhagic fever and plague, and both have severe symptoms.

    Hemorrhagic fever and plague do not mean that every rat can transmit it, but it is necessary to make sure that rats have the virus in their bodies and that there is close contact between humans before it can be transmitted.

    The source of infection for epidemic haemorrhagic fever is rats carrying hantavirus. The virus can be contracted by being bitten by a venomous rat, coming into contact with the excrement of a venomous rat, or eating food that has been eaten by a venomous rat, but the virus is not transmitted from person to person.

    Recommendation: The main measure to prevent epidemic hemorrhagic fever is to scientifically prevent rodents and eliminate rodents, and in areas with a high rate of rat poisoning, residents can be vaccinated.

    The main sources of infection of epidemic haemorrhagic fever are small rodents, including wild mice and house mice. Wild mice are basically there, and house mice are rare. The incubation period for hemorrhagic fever is generally 2-3 weeks.

    The typical clinical process is divided into five stages: febrile phase, hypotensive shock phase, oliguric phase, polyuria phase and recovery phase. If you have been exposed to the source of infection for more than 3 weeks, you are generally safe.

  21. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    Title: Broken Mountain Temple after the Zen Temple (often built).

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