Publication | Open Access
Fatal Human Rabies Caused by European Bat Lyssavirus Type 2a Infection in Scotland
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Citations
7
References
2003
Year
VaccinationBat RabiesFatal Human RabiesVirus EpidemiologyZoonotic DiseaseEmergent VirusIndigenous Human RabiesVirologyDisease OutbreakUnited KingdomEmerging Infectious DiseaseVirus TransmissionMedicineAnimal VirusEpidemiologyVector Borne Disease
We wish to report the first recorded case of indigenous human rabies caused by a bat bite in the United Kingdom in 100 years. This instructive case report highlights a number of key lessons: first, bites from insectivorous bats indiginous to the United Kingdom can cause rabies in humans; second, rabies immunization is essential for bat-handlers, and postexposure treatment for rabies is essential for patients bitten by bats; third, patients able to give a history who present with acute flaccid paralysis and/or presumptive viral encephalitis should be asked if they have been bitten by bats, irrespective of travel history, or this history should be obtained from family or friends; fourth, antemortem diagnosis of bat rabies (EBLV type 2a infection) in humans is possible using RT-PCR.
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