Date: September 1, 2016
Source: PLOS
China has the second highest
number of reported rabies cases in the world, but numbers of human deaths have
been decreasing. According to WHO, the Chinese authorities are forecasting
national rabies elimination by 2025. Most of the cases are reported from the
country's Southeastern provinces. A study published in PLOS Neglected
Tropical Diseases reports on ongoing transmission of rabies in
Northwestern China, highlighting challenges and opportunities pertinent to the
elimination efforts.
Rong-Liang Hu, from the Academy
of Military Medical Sciences in Changchun, China, and colleagues report that
while overall human fatalities are decreasing, the rabies epidemic is still
geographically expanding, with new cases having been recorded in previously
rabies-free and low incidence provinces in the North of China.
Concerned that control efforts in
reservoir animals are being neglected, the researchers document transmission
from dogs and wild foxes to cattle and camels. Vaccination of stray dogs and
wild foxes would require an oral vaccine, but such a vaccine is not currently
available. The researchers urge that "more research should be devoted to
the development of oral vaccines for dogs and foxes."
To control rabies in domestic
animals, the researchers state, the only type of vaccine available in China is
canine inactivated vaccine, which must be administered by intramuscular
injection. This vaccine is rarely used to immunize large domestic animals.
Consequently, there is little evidence on vaccination dosing and scheduling, or
on resulting protective immunity.
To test the canine vaccine in
large domestic animals, the researchers studied an emergency vaccination to
protect 300 adult cattle and 330 adult camels following a local outbreak. The
animals were randomly divided into 9 groups and immunized intramuscularly with
a single injection containing one, two, or three doses of canine inactivated
vaccine. The researchers collected and analyzed blood samples from 45 randomly
selected cows and 30 camels before and 3, 6 , 9, and 12 months after
vaccination.
No comments:
Post a Comment
You only need to enter your comment once! Comments will appear once they have been moderated. This is so as to stop the would-be comedian who has been spamming the comments here with inane and often offensive remarks. You know who you are!