Emerging Infectious Diseases (Jun 2003)

Human Rabies: A Reemerging Disease in Costa Rica?

  • Xiomara Badilla,
  • Victor Pérez-Herra,
  • Ligia Quirós,
  • Ana Morice,
  • Edwin Jiménez,
  • Elizabeth Sáenz,
  • Fernando Salazar,
  • Rodrigo Fernández,
  • Lillian Orciari,
  • Pamela Yager,
  • Sylvia Whitfield,
  • Charles E. Rupprecht

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid0906.020632
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 6
pp. 721 – 723

Abstract

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Two human rabies cases caused by a bat-associated virus variant were identified in September 2001 in Costa Rica, after a 31-year absence of the disease in persons. Both patients lived in a rural area where cattle had a high risk for bat bites, but neither person had a definitive history of being bitten by a rabid animal. Characterization of the rabies viruses from the patients showed that the reservoir was the hematophagous Vampire Bat, Desmodus rotundus, and that a sick cat was the vector.

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