Friday 20 September 2013

Treatment Of Rabies For Humans

By Patricia Ramsey


Like in your favorite zombie-apocalypse movie or series, a bite can cause death and turn you into something that does crazy things. In rabies, the effects go the other way around. If you have been bitten and if it was left untreated, you would go crazy first before you die. Some animals that can cause rabies are cats, dogs, bats, foxes, coyotes, racoons and skunks. A victim must be rushed to the hospital after being bitten or early signs of the infection have shown.

Taking Care of Wounds

Saliva exposure alone is not enough to declare whether you have been infected unless you are aware that the animal in contact has rabies. The most common situation where you can get the virus is a bite and this has to be a bite with a wound. After you get bitten, take care of the wounds first before rushing yourself to the hospital. Wash the wounds with soap and water to help ward away some rabies together with other infection that could thrive in an open wound.

Get to a hospital and show the bite to the doctors in the emergency room. Your wounds will be cleaned by the attending physician with a disinfectant or solution, made of povidone-iodine. The physician will also check on the wound for bones and tissue damages to know whether you wounds would need some stitching. A tetanus shot will be given to patients that haven't taken it yet before. Snake or spider bites are not the only kinds of bites that you should be scared of and rush to get some medical attention.

Treatment

You will be given a shot of Human Rabies immunoglobulin. This has fast acting antibodies that will protect you from the virus. If you've got this kind of vaccination even if it has been years ago, there is no need for another shot of this remedy. The treatment of rabies does not end here as a series of consultation and vaccination is required so that you can make sure that you are safe from the deadly effects of rabies.

These follow up vaccination will be done on five scheduled days. First one will be on the day that you've been rushed to the hospital and the next will be on the third, seventh, fourteenth and twenty eighth. These shots will all be injected into your arm and you still have to check on yourself for other symptoms. Once the condition had progressed, a patient might need some cardiac and respiratory support, intensive care and anti-anxiety medications.




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