Can rabies be dormant?

Yes, rabies can be dormant in the body during the incubation period, which is the time between exposure (like a bite) and the first symptoms, ranging from weeks to months, sometimes even years, as the virus travels from the bite site to the brain via nerves. There are usually no symptoms during this phase, but once the virus reaches the brain and spinal cord, it rapidly progresses to severe illness and is almost always fatal.
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Can rabies appear after 10 years?

We report an unusual case of rabies, with very prolonged incubation period suspected to be more than 20 years, from the South Western state of India, Goa.
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What are the symptoms of silent rabies?

SIR: Symptoms characteristic of rabies are hydrophobia, agitation, and irritability. Some cases present with depressive symptoms frequently termed as “silent rabies.” History of contact with a diseased animal is usually available for a diagnosis of rabies.
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Can rabies remain dormant in humans?

Rabies can lay dormant in your body for 1 to 3 months. Doctors call this the "incubation period." Symptoms will appear once the virus travels through your central nervous system and hits your brain.
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What is the longest time for rabies to show up?

The incubation period in humans is typically between 20 and 90 days, although incubation periods as short as 4 days and longer than 6 years have been documented. This variation is probably related to the site of inoculation, the severity of the wound, and the amount of virus introduced.
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What Happens When a Human Gets Rabies?

How late is too late to catch rabies?

Even if you have been bitten a few days, weeks or months ago, it is never too late to start. The rabies virus can incubate for several years before it causes symptoms. If you wait until you get symptoms, it will be too late – there is no treatment for established rabies … rabies is fatal.
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How quickly would I know if I had rabies?

Rabies symptoms can appear anywhere from a few days to over a year after exposure, but typically develop in 1 to 3 months, with an average of about two months, depending on the bite's location (closer to the brain means faster onset) and severity, as the virus travels along nerves to the brain. Early signs include fever, headache, weakness, and tingling at the wound, progressing to confusion, anxiety, hallucinations, and paralysis once the brain is affected, at which point the disease is almost always fatal.
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What is the 10 day rule in rabies?

The 10-day observation period for a biting dog, cat, or ferret is a standard public health practice to determine rabies risk: if the animal remains healthy for 10 days after biting someone, it wasn't shedding the rabies virus in its saliva at the time of the bite, meaning the exposed person usually doesn't need rabies post-exposure shots (PEP). This quarantine ensures the animal is available for monitoring, preventing unnecessary euthanasia for brain testing and avoiding expensive PEP for the bite victim if the animal stays healthy.
 
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Can a human have rabies and not know it?

After a rabies exposure in the absence of post-exposure prophylaxis, the virus must travel to the brain before it can cause symptoms. Therefore, the incubation period may last for weeks to months based on: Location of the exposure site (proximity to the brain)
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Can I check if I have rabies?

At the time a potentially rabid animal bites you, there's no way to know whether the animal has transmitted the rabies virus to you. It's common not to find bite marks, too. Your doctor may order many tests to detect the rabies virus, but they may need to be repeated later to confirm whether you're carrying the virus.
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Has anyone ever survived rabies without a vaccine?

It was initially attempted in 2004 on Jeanna Giese, a teenage girl from Wisconsin, who subsequently became the first human known to have survived rabies without receiving post-exposure prophylaxis before symptom onset.
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What are the first signs of rabies?

Early rabies symptoms often mimic the flu (fever, headache, weakness) plus tingling/itching at the bite site, followed by anxiety, confusion, and difficulty swallowing, which progresses to delirium, paralysis, coma, and is almost always fatal once symptoms appear, making prompt treatment crucial.
 
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Can you get rabies without being bitten?

Can I get rabies in any way other than an animal bite? Non-bite exposures to rabies are very rare. Scratches, abrasions, open wounds, or mucous membranes contaminated with saliva or other potentially infectious material (such as brain tissue) from a rabid animal constitute non-bite exposures.
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Do I need a rabies shot if there was a bat in my house?

Yes, you likely need a rabies shot (post-exposure prophylaxis or PEP) if a bat was in your house, especially if anyone was sleeping, a child, or an impaired person was present, or if there was any direct contact (bite, scratch, even waking up with it in the room), because bat bites can be tiny and missed; contact your health department and doctor immediately to arrange for the bat to be tested and to start PEP if exposure is suspected. 
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At what point is it too late to treat rabies?

Usually you can wait for test results from a healthy domestic animal to see if rabies shots are needed. Bites and verified exposures from wild animals should be treated as if the animal were rabid until rabies has been ruled out. Once a person develops rabies symptoms it is too late for treatment!
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How do you test for rabies?

Rabies rule-out requires a full cross-section of the brainstem and representative samples from the cerebellum. LN34 can detect rabies in suspect human rabies cases using antemortem skin biopsy samples from the nape of the neck and saliva samples.
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Am I safe if the dog that bit me survives 10 days?

A 10-day quarantine is necessary because a rabies-infected animal can only transmit the disease after clinical signs have developed. If no signs have developed after the 10-day confinement, this means the dog could not have transmitted rabies to you at the time of the bite.
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Can I get rabies after 2 years?

Symptoms of rabies usually take 3 to 12 weeks to appear, but they can appear after a few days or not for several months or years.
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Where is rabies most common in the United States?

Midwestern United States

The most widely distributed reservoir of rabies in the United States, however, and the source of most human cases in the U.S., are bats. All five of the human rabies cases in the Midwest from 2009 to 2018 were identified genetically as strains of rabies from bats.
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Why 10-day quarantine for rabies?

The 10-day confinement and observation period for dogs and cats has withstood the test of time as a way to prevent human rabies. The quarantine period eliminates the need to destroy healthy pets to test their brains for the rabies virus.
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