Friday, March 6, 2009
Drama Update
Many friends and family have been rabid with questions and concern.
hehehehehe... pun intended.
Thank you for your thoughts and prayers.
Besides all the puns, everything is good. I'm good. So, let me break it down:
What are the chances I have rabies to begin with? Slim. We've seen the cat around for months before the bite. And the story tells me that the cat was more scared than rabid, having spent 12 hours in a garage, in a strange house, with two territorial cats patiently waiting for it to move, only to be held upside down in a blanket after a terrifying chase. Personally, I don't think the cat will come around again.
When you get bit by an unknown animal, and that animal is cannot be recovered, there is always a genuine concern that exposure to rabies may have occurred. As rabies is fatal, 100% of the time, treatment has to begin within 10 days of exposure. Now, 48+ hours from the bite, and no animal decapitation underway (rabies testing involves testing the brain tissue of the animal for acute encephalitis), I took the precautionary, and recommended, move of starting the rabies vaccination series.
So what does that entail, to start the series? Well, there is a lot of stuff on the internet (as this is itself), but to those that know me then, this is a first hand account.
First. There are needles. Lots. Second, there is no shot to the stomach. Third, there is a lot of talk about pain... eh, I may not be the best judge of this, but I have always had a high threshold for pain, and well, "what pain?" sums up my experience so far. The cat bite, at that instant, was painful; but that quickly subsided... for me.
Rabies vaccination is initially administered in the ER. There are two parts to the initial treatment: human rabies immuno globulin, or HRIG. HRIG is administered at the wound site and jumpstarts your immune system as well as provides immediate 4–8 week protection. The second treatment is the vaccine itself. Based on weight, the number of injections are dependent on individuals. I got four shots, all in the dense muscles the body: thigh, deltoids and gluts.
The vaccine treatments continue for a month, 3, 7, 14 and 28 days from the initial treatment as an out patient. I'll be busy to say the least, and promise not to bite.
And that's the story so far.
Everyone's thoughts and prayers are very much appreciated.
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