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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with dropped jaw and swallowing trouble likely had paralytic

By Viswanathan, Naveenkumar et al.·Published in Journal of infection in developing countries·2024·Veterinary College and Research Institute, India·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Probable paralytic rabies in a dog: ante-mortem clinical diagnosis implications in limited resource settings.

Species:
dog
Canine RabiesBrain & nervesDogs

Plain-English summary

A one-year-old female dog was brought to the vet because she had a dropped jaw and couldn't swallow food or water for three days. The owner mentioned that the dog had been bitten by another dog a week earlier. Upon examination, the vet found facial distortion and paralysis in the throat muscles, leading to a diagnosis of probable paralytic rabies. Unfortunately, despite isolation and care, the dog passed away two days later due to the progression of the disease. This case highlights the critical need for awareness and early diagnosis of rabies in dogs, especially in areas with limited resources.

People also search for: dog rabies symptoms · why is my dog unable to swallow · dog bite treatment rabies

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Rabies is a dreadful zoonotic viral disease that affects animals and humans with a fatality rate of 100%. This report aims to create awareness among the veterinarians and general public about the paralytic form of rabies in order to understand the antemortem clinical diagnosis implications in limited resource settings, so as to follow the post-exposure prophylaxis at the golden hour period of rabies transmission. CASE PRESENTATION: A one-year-old female dog was presented to the Ambulatory Clinic Unit, Veterinary Clinical Complex, Veterinary College and Research Institute, Theni, Tamil Nadu, India with the ailment of a dropped jaw and was unable to swallow food and water for the past three days. Epidemiological investigations revealed that the animal had dog-bitten wounds from a week ago. On clinical examination, facial distortion, changes in the vocal cord, and paralysis of the throat muscle were noticed. Based on the anamnesis, clinical, and epidemiological investigations, the animal was diagnosed to be a probable case of paralytic form of canine rabies. In the limited resource settings, antemortem clinical diagnosis was practiced to suspect rabies-infected dogs. Further, the owner was advised to implement preventive measures to safeguard against rabies infection. The dog was kept under isolation and succumbed on day two with evidence of progressive paralytic signs. CONCLUSIONS: This report emphasizes the importance of paralytic rabies, alongside of furious form of rabies, further creating awareness among the general public about the antemortem clinical diagnosis under limited resource settings.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39078786/