Correct care of your pet may prevent the spread of infection or illness to household members. To prevent the spread of disease from your pet, be careful to:
Keep your pet's vaccines up-to-date.
See a veterinarian regularly with your pet for health checkups.
Keep your pet's bedding and living area clean.
Feed your pet a balanced diet. Don't give your pet raw foods or allow it to drink out of the toilet.
Clean cat litter boxes every day. Pregnant women should not touch cat litter. It may contain infectious diseases that cause birth defects, including toxoplasmosis.
Wash your hands thoroughly after touching animals or cleaning up animal waste. Your children should do the same.
Washing hands is especially important after handling reptiles. These animals may harbor a bacteria called salmonella. Salmonella can cause salmonellosis. This disease lead to diarrhea, fever, and abdominal cramps. Most people who contract salmonella will have symptoms that last from 4 to 7 days and will get better without treatment.
Wild animals and insects can be carriers for some very serious diseases. These include rabies, tetanus, Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, hantavirus, and the plague. Animal bites and scratches, even when they are minor, may become infected and spread bacteria to other parts of the body. Whether the bite is from a family pet or an animal in the wild, scratches and bites may carry disease. Cat scratches, for example, even from a kitten, may carry "cat scratch disease." It's a type of bacterial infection. Bites and/or scratches that break the skin are even more likely to become infected.
Wash the wound with soap and water under pressure from a faucet. Don't scrub. It can bruise the tissue.
If the bite or scratch is bleeding, put pressure on it with a clean bandage or towel to stop the bleeding.
Dry the wound and cover it with a sterile dressing. Don't use tape or butterfly bandages. They can trap harmful bacteria in the wound.
Call your child's healthcare provider for guidance in reporting the attack. Your child's healthcare provider will decide whether more treatment, such as antibiotics, a tetanus booster, or rabies vaccine, is needed. This call needs to be made even if it looks like a minor injury, and even if the animal involved is your pet or a neighbor's pet.
If possible, find the animal that inflicted the wound. Some animals need to be captured, confined, and watched for rabies. Don't try to capture the animal yourself. Instead, call the nearest animal warden or animal control office in your area.
If the animal can't be found, if the animal was a high-risk species (such as a skunk or bat), or the animal attack was unprovoked, the victim may need a series of rabies shots.
Rabies is a widespread, viral infection of warm-blooded animals. It is caused by a virus in the Rhabdoviridae family. It attacks the nervous system. Once symptoms develop, it is 100% fatal in animals.
In North America, rabies happens primarily in skunks, raccoons, foxes, and bats. In some areas, these wild animals infect domestic cats, dogs, and livestock. In the U.S., cats are more likely than dogs to be rabid. Generally, rabies is rare in small rodents, such as beavers, chipmunks, squirrels, rats, mice, or hamsters. Rabies is also rare in rabbits. In the mid-Atlantic states, where rabies is increasing in raccoons, woodchucks (also known as groundhogs) can also be rabid.
The rabies virus is most often passed on through the bite of a rabid animal. It travels to the central nervous system. Once the infection is established in the brain, the virus travels down the nerves from the brain and multiplies in different organs.
The salivary glands are most important in the spread of rabies from one animal to another. When an infected animal bites another animal, the rabies virus is transmitted through the infected animal's saliva. Scratches by claws of rabid animals are also dangerous because these animals lick their claws.
The incubation period in humans from the time of exposure to the start of illness can range anywhere from 5 days to more than a year. But the average incubation period is about 2 months. Each person may have different symptoms. Initially, there are no symptoms. When symptoms do develop, they may include:
Pain, numbness, and tingling around the wound site
Low-grade fever
Headache
Appetite loss
Intense thirst, but drinking will cause painful throat spasms
Restlessness
Hyperactivity
Disorientation, confusion, and anxiety
Seizures
These symptoms may look like other health conditions. Always talk with your child's healthcare provider for a diagnosis.
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