PRE HOSPITAL
- Thoroughly wash wound with soap and water.
- If safely able, capture wild animal for sacrifice and testing.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Airway, breathing, and circulation
- Intubation as needed
- Treatment of seizures
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Wound cleansing and irrigation
- Tetanus immunization
- Determine if exposure requires prophylaxis:
- Consult local health department
- Domestic animal bite:
- Home monitoring of animal for 10 days
- If animal displays no signs of illness, patient does not need PEP.
- Wild animal bite:
- Rabies testing of sacrificed animal head-Negri bodies are diagnostic
- Start PEP and stop if test is negative
- Treat if animal not captured.
- Unprovoked attacks should be assumed high risk for exposure.
- PEP:
- Passive immunization with human rabies immune globulin (HRIG)
- HRIG: 20 IU/kg:
- Majority infiltrated in and around wound
- Remainder given IM (gluteus)
- Active immunization with rabies vaccine
- Rabies vaccine: 1 mL (2.5 IU) IM days 0, 3, 7, 14, add day 28 if immunocompromised
- 3 vaccines approved in US:
- Imovax–human diploid cell culture
- RabAvert–chick embryo cell culture
- Rabies vaccine adsorbed–inactivated virus, for US military
- Administration location:
- Deltoid in adults or anterior thigh in small children or infants
- For those with pre-exposure prophylaxis and rabies exposure:
- Do not require HRIG
- Need vaccine booster on days 0 and 3
- If care delayed after rabies exposure:
- HRIG not indicated >7 days after exposure
- Vaccine should be administered as usual
- Pre-exposure prophylaxis:
- Rabies vaccine on days 0, 7, 21, 28
- Target groups: Veterinarians, animal handlers, virus lab workers, foreign travelers in endemic regions
Pediatric Considerations
Treat as in adults.
Pregnancy Considerations
Treatment considered safe during pregnancy.
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Ensure adequate access for subsequent vaccine administration post rabies exposure.
Admission Criteria
Patient with clinical signs of rabies
Discharge Criteria
- Stable patient
- No evidence of reaction to vaccine
Issues for Referral
Public health and CDC for suspicious cases
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
- Ensure access to subsequent vaccine doses
- Patient should follow up with animal control if source animal has been sacrificed or is being observed.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- PEP is only proven treatment after exposure.
- PEP should be given in all high-risk exposures regardless of timing
- Vaccine should only be given in deltoid in adults: Treatment failures reported with inadvertent SC administration in gluteus injections.
ADDITIONAL READING
- American Academy of Pediatrics.
Report of the Committee on Infectious Report
. 29th ed. Elk Grove Village, IL: American Academy of Pediatrics; 2012.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Rabies. Available at
http://www.cdc.gov/rabies./
Updated December 13, 2012.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Recovery of a patient from clinical rabies–California, 2011.
MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep.
2012;61(4):61–65.
- Franka R, Rupprecht CE. Treatment of rabies in the 21st century: Curing the incurable.
Future Microbiol.
2011;6:1135–1140.
- Manning SE, Rupprecht CE, Fishbein D, et al. Human rabies prevention—United States, 2008: Recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices.
MMWR Recomm Rep
. 2008;57:1–28.
- Willoughby RE Jr, Tieves KS, Hoffman GM, et al. Survival after treatment of rabies with induction of coma.
N Engl J Med.
2005;352:2508–2514.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
CODES
ICD9
- 071 Rabies
- V01.5 Contact with or exposure to rabies
ICD10
- A82.9 Rabies, unspecified
- Z20.3 Contact with and (suspected) exposure to rabies
RADIATION INJURY
Robert J. Feldman
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Radiation
in this chapter refers to ionizing radiation.
- Alpha (
α
)—helium nucleus; does not penetrate skin
- Beta (
β
)—electron; penetrates tissue a few cm
- Gamma (
γ
)—photon; penetrates body
- Neutron—very penetrating; not detected by Geiger counter, but neutron emitters
also emit γ radiation
- Radioisotope/radionuclide—chemical element that emits radiation from its nucleus:
- Radioactivity cannot be destroyed, only relocated or shielded.
- Being radioactive does not change element’s other chemical and physical properties, such as heavy metal toxicity.
- Exposure/irradiation—patient has been in presence of ionizing radiation:
- Whole body or only certain areas may be exposed.
- Contamination—radioactive material where it is not desired:
- Internal—within body (e.g., lung)
- External—outside body (skin, hair, clothing)
- Dose—amount of radiation energy absorbed by tissue:
- Units and conversions:
- 1 gray (Gy) = 100 rad
- 1 sievert (Sv) = 100 rem
- For β and γ radiation:
- 1 Gy = 1 Sv = 100 rad = 100 rem
ALERT
Contact regional or federal authorities for guidance if radiation incident is suspected.
Pediatric Considerations
- Children are more sensitive to radiation injury.
- Potassium iodide is most protective for children and should be given promptly if contamination with radioactive iodine (I-131) is suspected.
Pregnancy Considerations
- Developing fetus is very sensitive to radiation.
- Pregnant staff should not care for radioactively contaminated patients.
ETIOLOGY
- Ionizing radiation leads to cellular injury.
- Damage to blood vessels leads to endarteritis and loss of tissue blood supply.
- Higher rates of cell division within an organ make it more sensitive to radiation:
- Bone marrow and GI tract are very sensitive.
- Skin and nerve are less sensitive.
- Acute radiation syndrome
(ARS) occurs in stages following whole-body exposure:
- Prodromal: Acute radiation injury leads to acute inflammation (0–48 hr).
- Latent: If the acute phase of injury is survived, inflammation and symptoms subside (0–2 wk).
- Manifest illness: At higher radiation doses, organ failure then develops.
- Recovery or death (usually from infection) follows.
- Sources of radiation include medical devices, therapeutics, nuclear weapons, and industry.
DIAGNOSIS
- Diagnosing contamination is fairly easy.
- Diagnosing and quantifying exposure is more difficult and probably require expert consultation.
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Vary based on dose; see:
http://www.afrri.usuhs.mil/outreach/pdf/AFRRI-Pocket-Guide.pdf
for quick reference.
- Overall:
- Whole-body exposure: Syndrome similar to high-dose chemotherapy toxicity
- ARS progresses more rapidly the higher the absorbed dose.
- Local exposure:
- Early resembles thermal or UV burn
- Later resembles ischemic ulcer