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Journal ArticleDOI

Human rabies: neuropathogenesis, diagnosis, and management

TLDR
The shorter survival of patients with furious rabies compared with those with paralytic rabies closely corresponds to the greater amount of virus and lower immune response in the CNS of Patients with the furious form.
Abstract
Rabies is an almost invariably fatal disease that can present as classic furious rabies or paralytic rabies. Recovery has been reported in only a few patients, most of whom were infected with bat rabies virus variants, and has been associated with promptness of host immune response and spontaneous (immune) virus clearance. Viral mechanisms that have evolved to minimise damage to the CNS but enable the virus to spread might explain why survivors have overall good functional recovery. The shorter survival of patients with furious rabies compared with those with paralytic rabies closely corresponds to the greater amount of virus and lower immune response in the CNS of patients with the furious form. Rabies virus is present in the CNS long before symptom onset: subclinical anterior horn cell dysfunction and abnormal brain MRI in patients with furious rabies are evident days before brain symptoms develop. How the virus produces its devastating effects and how it selectively impairs behaviour in patients with furious rabies and the peripheral nerves of patients with paralytic rabies is beginning to be understood. However, to develop a pragmatic treatment strategy, a thorough understanding of the neuropathogenetic mechanisms is needed.

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Estado de inmunidad humoral posvacunal de caninos y felinos en un foco de rabia canina de origen silvestre de una región de Colombia

TL;DR: In this paper, a cross-sectional and nonexperimental sampling by convenience was carried out on 130 canines and 38 felines from the rural and urban area of the municipality of San Sebastián de Mariquita, Colombia, which presented a fatal case of canine rabies due to atypical bat variant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Compliance rate of anti-rabies vaccination in patients presenting with an animal bite

TL;DR: In this paper, the compliance rate of anti-rabies vaccination in patients with animal bites who presented to the emergency department (ED) during the COVID-19 pandemic was evaluated.
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Fundamental immunological problems associated with "transmissible spongiform encephalopathies".

TL;DR: An untenable assumption is being made in that saline brain homogenates do not cause tissue damage but it is known since the time of Pasteur, that they give rise to "post-rabies vaccination allergic encephalomyelitis".
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La rabia: enfermedad zoonótica reemergente en México

TL;DR: In this article , the authors proposed a method to solve the problem of the problem: the one-dimensional graph.. .
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: Although they escaped notice until relatively recently, miRNAs comprise one of the more abundant classes of gene regulatory molecules in multicellular organisms and likely influence the output of many protein-coding genes.
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The role of microRNA-1 and microRNA-133 in skeletal muscle proliferation and differentiation

TL;DR: The results show that two mature miRNAs, derived from the same miRNA polycistron and transcribed together, can carry out distinct biological functions and suggest a molecular mechanism in which miRN as participate in transcriptional circuits that control skeletal muscle gene expression and embryonic development.
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5'-Triphosphate RNA Is the Ligand for RIG-I

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the 5′-triphosphate end of RNA generated by viral polymerases is responsible for retinoic acid–inducible protein I (RIG-I)–mediated detection of RNA molecules in viruses known to be detected by MDA-5 such as the picornaviruses.
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