Antemortem diagnosis of human rabies in a veterinarian infected when handling a herbivore in Minas Gerais, Brazil

Authors

  • Mariana Gontijo de Brito SES Health Surveillance Department
  • Talita Leal Chamone SES Health Surveillance Department
  • Fernando José da Silva São João Del Rei Regional Department of Health
  • Marcelo Yohito Wada Department of Health Surveillance
  • Alexandre Braga de Miranda Eduardo de Menezes Hospital
  • Juliana Galera Castilho The Pasteur Institute of São Paulo
  • Maria Luiza Carrieri The Pasteur Institute of São Paulo
  • Ivanete Kotait The Pasteur Institute of São Paulo
  • Francisco Leopoldo Lemos SES Health Surveillance Department

Keywords:

Human rabies, Non-bite rabies exposure, Antemortem and postmortem diagnosis, Molecular biology

Abstract

The Ministry of Health's National Human Rabies Control Program advocates pre-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) for professionals involved with animals that are at risk of contracting rabies. We report an antemortem and postmortem diagnosis of rabies in a veterinarian who became infected when handling herbivores with rabies. The antemortem diagnosis was carried out with a saliva sample and a biopsy of hair follicles using molecular biology techniques, while the postmortem diagnosis used a brain sample and conventional techniques. The veterinarian had collected samples to diagnose rabies in suspect herbivores (bovines and caprines) that were subsequently confirmed to be positive in laboratory tests. After onset of classic rabies symptoms, saliva and hair follicles were collected and used for antemortem diagnostic tests and found to be positive by RT-PCR. Genetic sequencing showed that the infection was caused by variant 3 (Desmodus rotundus), a finding confirmed by tests on the brain sample. It is essential that professionals who are at risk of infection by the rabies virus undergo pre-exposure prophylaxis. This study also confirms that molecular biology techniques were used successfully for antemortem diagnosis and therefore not only allow therapeutic methods to be developed, but also enable the source of infection in human rabies cases to be identified accurately and quickly.

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Published

2011-02-01

Issue

Section

Rabies

How to Cite

Brito, M. G. de, Chamone, T. L., Silva, F. J. da, Wada, M. Y., Miranda, A. B. de, Castilho, J. G., Carrieri, M. L., Kotait, I., & Lemos, F. L. (2011). Antemortem diagnosis of human rabies in a veterinarian infected when handling a herbivore in Minas Gerais, Brazil . Revista Do Instituto De Medicina Tropical De São Paulo, 53(1), 39-44. https://revistas.usp.br/rimtsp/article/view/31372