I just got my dogs shots updated the other day and the vet said that its not uncommon to not give dogs a rabies vaccine. The only reason this is allowed is if you ar living in a non rural area that hasn't had many reports or outbreaks of rabies. However, it is always best to check with your vet.
Because the rabies shot is a live virus, no. This could increase the rate of your dog getting sick from rabies. Get your dog tested, then if it has rabies, get it rabies injections.
Yes! This is infact the best time to begin giving post-exposure treatment.
The dog is shot because he contracted rabies.
First of all, if the dog has rabies, death will be imminent. The crazy behavior would be the result of the infection of the nervous system.If you are trying to say that the dog bit someone and was given a rabies shot because of that. . . Normally, a dog is quarantined for 10 days after a bite to see if he shows signs of the disease and to determine if the victim should undergo the rabies treatment. Giving an uninfected dog a rabies shot might be conditional to release. Some people feel that the rabies vaccines do affect the temperament of their pets, though it should not make them crazy.
Yes. You can feed the cat before rabies vaccine shot.
She had to be shot by Travis because she had hydrophobia(rabies)
today i gave rabies shot to my 3mth old puppy but i m not sure that it went 100% can i give one more shot of rabies vaccine.....
If a cat has a rabies shot after it has already become infected with rabies, the shot will be ineffective and the cat can infect people despite having been vaccinated. If the cat receives its rabies shot while it is healthy, and if the shot is effective (which it is nearly all the time), then the cat cannot catch rabies and cannot infect a human. However, a very small number of rabies shots (about one in 100,000) is not effective. Note that the rabies vaccine can lose effectiveness if it is mishandled. In almost all cases, if the original shot is ineffective, the booster shot corrects it.
Atticus shot the dog, Tim Johnson, because he was infected with rabies and posed a danger to the community. It was a necessary act to protect the people from the threat of the rabid dog.
no it's dead
No, a rabies shot protects against rabies (atleast 99.9999% of the time).
no I personally was bitten by a java monkey and I did not have to get a rabies shot, but I did need a tetanus shot.. and that's a pretty big needle!