What symptoms did you experience with your rabies?
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What are rabies symptoms and signs in humans?
After the first exposure (in most people, an animal bite), the symptoms of
itching or discomfort like pins or needles pricking the skin occur at the bite
area. In addition, the person may develop fever and a headache. Investigators
suggest these symptoms may last from about two days to weeks. This is the acute
phase or the acute incubation phase of the disease. Unfortunately, there is
another incubation period before the next set of signs and symptoms develop. The
National Institutes of Health (NIH) suggests that the average latent incubation
period is about three to seven weeks, although they do report a range from seven days to 10
years, with the longer time periods occurring infrequently.
The symptoms and signs of rabies in humans may consist of some or many of the
following according to the CDC and NIH:
Anxiety, stress, and tension
Delirium
Drooling
Convulsions
Exaggerated sensation at the bite site
Excitability or combativeness
Hallucinations
Loss of feeling in an area of the body
Loss of muscle
function
Low-grade fever (102 F or lower)
Muscle spasms
Numbness
and tingling
Pain at the site of the bite
Restlessness, insomnia
Swallowing difficulty (drinking causes throat spasms and the person may become
hydrophobic)
When these symptoms develop, the person will likely die from the disease.
Less than 10 people have survived after developing such clinical rabies
symptoms, and most of the few survivors had some previous level of treatment.
When people develop clinical rabies, the best treatment is supportive care.