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Charles E. Rupprecht

Researcher at Wistar Institute

Publications -  484
Citations -  29552

Charles E. Rupprecht is an academic researcher from Wistar Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rabies & Rabies virus. The author has an hindex of 86, co-authored 475 publications receiving 27058 citations. Previous affiliations of Charles E. Rupprecht include United States Department of Health and Human Services & Global Alliance for Rabies Control.

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Phylogeny of Lagos bat virus: challenges for lyssavirus taxonomy.

TL;DR: The suggested quantitative separation of lyssavirus genotypes using the N, P, M and G genes was investigated and indicated that the current criteria should be revised since overlaps between intergenotypic and intragenotypic variation occur.
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Direct and indirect costs of rabies exposure: a retrospective study in southern California (1998-2002).

TL;DR: The direct and indirect costs of suspected human rabies exposure were estimated for San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties, California, USA with a mean total cost of $3,688, the direct costs per case were $2,564, and the indirect costs were $1,124.
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Poxvirus-vectored vaccines for rabies--a review.

TL;DR: Alternative recombinant vaccines using adenovirus as an antigen delivery vector have been extensively investigated and may provide an important addition to the currently available oral rabies vaccine repertoire, but are not the primary subject of this review.
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Temporal dynamics of rabies in a wildlife host and the risk of cross-species transmission.

TL;DR: Forecasting of the public health and veterinary burden of rabies and assessing the economics of control programmes, requires linking outcomes to dynamic, but predictable, changes in the temporal evolution ofrabies epizootics.
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A comparison of two serological methods for detecting the immune response after rabies vaccination in dogs and cats being exported to rabies-free areas.

TL;DR: Two tests were compared for their ability to detect the 0.5 international units/ml of antibody required by the World Health Organization and the Office International des Epizooties as the minimum response for proof of rabies immunization.