That bites: What to know about rabies
Posted: August 8, 2016
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Signs and symptoms of rabies can include irritability, headache, fever and double vision, and itching at the bite site.[/caption]
You're exploring the outdoors while camping with family and friends and a bat flies from nowhere and bites your arm. Taking quick action will help prevent you from contracting rabies.
Rabies is a viral disease that affects the central nervous system. It is transmitted from infected mammals to mammals or mammals to humans, usually by an animal bite.
Once symptoms appear, it is almost always fatal.
Which animals carry rabies?
Raccoons, skunks, foxes and especially bats are common rabies carriers. According to Marilyn King, a Marshfield Clinic infection prevention and control registered nurse, bats are most prevalent in Wisconsin followed by skunks. "Any animal that bites needs to be tested or quarantined and observed," King said. Rabies is spread by saliva from a bite, but also can be transmitted if you are scratched.Symptoms may not immediately appear
Signs and symptoms of rabies can include irritability, headache, fever and double vision, and itching at the bite site. As it progresses, rabies can trigger spasms of the throat and muscles, convulsions, delirium, paralysis and death. Rabies may take one to three months before symptoms appear.It needs to be treated before symptom onset," King said. "After that time, treatments fail, and it's usually fatal."



