Не просите ссылок. Я читаю для себя и редко сохраняю. Но доверяю только источникам с указанием авторства, на сайтах клиник, научных журналов и т.п.
Просто я хорошо знаю, как делаются рерайты и чем наполнен интернет.
Posted on: 14 Ноябрь 2010, 01:44:42
Вот здесь почитайте. Здесь ссылки на уважаемые официальные источники, кстати относительно инкубационного периода у крыс, установленного в лабораториях.
http://www.ratbehavior.org/WildRatDisease.htm#RabiesHow fast does rabies progress in rats?
The speed of rabies progression depends on the rat's age, body weight, rabies strain, and rabies dose. The higher the dose, the faster the progression (Baer et al. 1965). The incubation period for wild type rabies (called "street rabies virus") is two to three weeks following injection to the foot in the laboratory (14-18 days: Kitselman and Mital 1967; median 16 days, range 10-25 days: Baer et al. 1968) and mortality is high (100%: Kitselman and Mital 1967; 63.6%: Baer et al. 1968).
Note, however, that a bite from a rabid predator would differ substantially from a needle injection to the foot: a predator's bite might create several wounds, all of which could be inoculated with the rabies virus. A natural bite may also be inflicted on the body of the rat instead of an extremity, and hence closer to the central nervous system. Hypothetically, such bites might be followed by a more rapid progression of the rabies virus and hence a shorter incubation time.
How does the rat's incubation period compare to that of other species?
Comparing rats with other species, raccoons (the most common wild animal carrier of rabies, Krebs et al. 1999, 2002) have an incubation period of about five weeks (estimated by Tinline et al. 2002). Vampire bats survived an average of 12 days after experimental infection (Setien et al. 1998). Ferrets incubate rabies for 22-33 days (Niezgoda et al. 1997a, b. 1998). Dogs incubate rabies from one week to several months (Fekadu 1993, Fekadu and Shaddock 1984).
Humans have a rabies incubation period of 1-3 months, but symptoms have been observed as quickly as a few days after inoculation, and as long as several years later (Rupprecht 2002, Lakhanapal and Sharma 1985).