No. Rabies, once symptoms have appeared, is untreatable. It is possible, however, to vaccinate against rabies and provide immunity and this can be done after rabies is contracted but before it is symptomatic. The sooner this is done after infection the more likely it is that the victim will survive. In the past there has been one case of a medically-induced coma causing the survival of a symptomatic patient, but attempts to replicate it have failed. The patient was one of only six people known to have survived the symptomatic disease in history.
rabies has no known cure.
there is no cure
No. No.
Humans can still get rabies, but if caught soon enough, they can receive treatment (a series of injections) to cure the rabies. A rabies vaccine was first developed in 1885 by Louis Pasteur and Eile Roux, two French scientists, and has evolved over time.
There is no cure for rabies once clinical symptoms appear; the disease is almost always fatal at that stage. However, rabies can be effectively prevented if post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) is administered promptly after exposure to the virus, typically through a series of rabies vaccinations and sometimes rabies immune globulin. This treatment must be initiated before symptoms develop to be effective. Vaccination of pets and wildlife control are crucial preventive measures against rabies.
it is very possible. there is no cure for rabies and you must treat it very early. rabies is very fatal and most people and animals die from it.
There was no "cure" for rabies then, and there is no cure for rabies now. People who develop symptoms almost invariably die; in the millions of cases in history, there are less than ten known survivors to date, and that's with medical treatment.
There is no cure for rabies in an animal. The animal must be destroyed (killed).
A vaccine is a form of disease prevention, not a cure for a disease.
Nobody has survived rabies without treatment. When some body survive like that, you can say that he had no rabies.
Louis Pasteur discovered the preventive treatment for rabies in 1885.
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