Like they have rabies
tingly
if not immediately treated, the person is not expected to live for more than a couple days of contracting rabies. it is almost always fatal if not treated.
If the animal is infected with the rabies virus, yes, a person can get rabies. The animal should be placed in quarantine and the person may have to undergo a series of rabies shots.
Yes, a person given anti-rabies treatment may experience side effects such as pain at the injection site, headache, nausea, and fatigue even if the dog does not have rabies. It is important to follow medical advice and complete the full course of treatment to prevent rabies infection from developing.
Probably not, if it does not have rabies why would it's poop have rabies?
Rabies do not feed on anything, like a bacteria would. Rabies is a virus.
No. He was not the first person to get the rabies. Rabies evolved with the mammals or you can say with warm blooded animals.
me
Man to man spread is very rare with rabies. Never the less, one case is reported in 1984 in with the child with rabies had bitten his father. Child died and after few days the father also died of rabies.
We don't know - rabies has been in the mammal population for thousands of years.
Rabies has not been found to be contagious from person to person. In theory, if a person infected with rabies were to bite someone else, the virus might spread, but no such cases have been recorded.
Rabies is transmitted through the salvia. If a cat has rabies, he can infect you with it. If a person is bitten or scratched by a cat with rabies, they have the possibility of getting rabies. An animal with rabies can show several symptoms. It can be disoriented, dumb looking, vicious, tired, foaming at the mouth, and/or unable to swallow. The only way to check for rabies is to send the head of the animal off for brain biopsy. For humans there is no test. If you are bitten or scratched by a rabies animal, go get rabies shots immediately.