Thursday, November 09, 2017

Virus infection disease: Rabies

Infectious Disease - Rabies
At the end of the nineteenth century, hundreds of people died from rabies every year. Almost invariably, these people got the disease from the bite of a domestic animal, usually a dog.

Because of the efforts of Louis Pasteur and many others, it is rare today for some one to die from rabies. And the few cases of rabies that arise each year almost invariably come about as a result of a bite from a wild animal, like a skunk or a bat. The rarity of the disease and the elimination of rabies from domestic animals are due largely to Pasteur’s discoveries and intense vaccination programs.

But rabies remains as a glaring example of the pain and suffering that can follow infection. And rabies is only one example of thousands of infectious diseases – diseases caused by prions, viruses, bacteria, fungi, and parasites – that make us sick and kill us. Some infectious may be essential. Others are terrifying.

A rhabdovirus virus causes rabies. There are many different types of rhabdoviruses and they cause a whole range of disease – rabies is one of the worst. The rabies is bullet shaped, covered with a large sheet of host-cell membrane and fortunately for all of us, is easily destroyed by soaps or drying. Rabies viruses are about 75 nm (nanometers) in diameter and about 150 to 300 nm long. A nanometer is one billionth of a meter, far beyond the realm human vision. These are tiny packets of trouble.

Rabid animals transmit rabies in their saliva. From the bite wound, the virus makes its way into neurons. Then it travels along the neurons to the central nervous system (brain and spinal cord) where it sets up shop. In the central nervous system, the rabies virus begins to destroy neurons as it produces more virus. Some of the new virus particles travel to the salivary gland, where they help spread the disease to others through bites.

In the process of its self-replication, the rabies virus decimates many of the neurons in the central nervous system. The result is a mental meltdown. But the virus doesn’t destroy all of the brain – just enough to drive the dog mad, just enough to make dog want to bite every other living thing it sees and pass on the infection.
Virus infection disease: Rabies

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