Dog HealthCat HealthGeneral Pet CareVeterinary Term
What Is Rabies?
📖 Definition
Rabies is a fatal viral disease of the nervous system caused by the rabies virus, transmitted through the saliva of an infected animal — almost always via a bite wound. Once symptoms appear in any animal (or human), the disease is nearly always fatal. Rabies vaccination is legally required for dogs and cats in most US states and many other countries.
The rabies virus travels from the bite wound along peripheral nerves to the brain, where it causes fatal encephalitis. The incubation period is variable — from weeks to months — which makes post-exposure treatment critical in humans and why any animal with unknown vaccination status that bites a person triggers a public health response. Once clinical signs appear in an animal, the disease is invariably fatal.
Clinical signs in animals progress through stages. The prodromal phase (1–3 days) involves personality changes — a friendly animal becomes withdrawn, or a shy animal becomes unusually aggressive. The excitative phase ('furious rabies') causes extreme agitation, aggression, and disorientation. The paralytic phase ('dumb rabies') causes progressive paralysis, inability to swallow, and coma. Not all animals show all stages.
Wildlife species serve as reservoir hosts — in North America, these include raccoons, bats, skunks, and foxes. The virus does not survive outside a host and is killed rapidly by sunlight, heat, and most disinfectants. Vaccination creates a robust immune response in dogs and cats that provides protection after exposure and is why vaccinated pets that have a wildlife encounter are placed in observation rather than euthanised.
📌 Key Facts
Transmission: Via saliva of infected animal — almost always through a bite
Incubation: Weeks to months
Outcome once symptoms appear: Nearly always fatal in all species
Reservoir species in North America: Raccoons, bats, skunks, foxes
Frequently Asked Questions about Rabies
Q: My vaccinated pet was bitten by a wild animal. What should I do?
Contact your vet immediately. A vaccinated pet that is bitten will typically require a booster vaccination and a period of observation (usually 45 days at home) per local rabies protocols. Do not handle the wound without gloves. Report the incident to local animal control if the biting animal might be caught and tested.
Q: Can indoor cats skip the rabies vaccine?
In most US states, the rabies vaccine is legally required for cats regardless of lifestyle. Indoor cats can encounter bats that enter the home, and even minimal exposure to an infected animal is sufficient for transmission. Beyond the law, the stakes — a human family member bitten by an unvaccinated cat that had any wildlife contact — are too high to take the risk.
Q: What does a rabies quarantine mean for my pet?
If your unvaccinated pet bites a person, local authorities may require a 10-day quarantine — either at home or at a facility — to determine whether the animal develops signs of rabies. If your vaccinated pet bites someone, a shorter observation period is typically required. Different rules apply if your pet was exposed to a potentially rabid animal.
⚠ Medical Disclaimer: This glossary entry is for educational purposes only
and does not constitute veterinary advice. Always consult a licensed veterinarian for diagnosis
and treatment of your pet's health conditions.