@@MrNight-dg1ug you have a playlist titled "Legendary Songs For Us Zoomers" so I wouldn't talk. Also, you wanted to be negative so you looked at my profile like a creep and saw nothing to hammer in so you said the weakest insult I've ever heard. Good one buddy.
@@user-ce6cl8wg3r Hypocritical, lol. Also, while you're there, give the Deep Into YT playlist a look; you won't regret it. Also, it was more of a rare insult.
Mr. Night since you wanted to be a weirdo and check people's profiles, you have a playlist called "fighting" in which you have multiple videos on "*PrEsSuRE POinT*" videos and videos titled "How to put someone to sleep" by touching their neck in a certain way. Your playlist titled "XD" is a copy and paste of RU-vid's normie meme playlists. As well as your first and most polluted playlist with over 200 videos of normie youtube humour. Your youtube playlists tell me everything I need to know, you're a geek, weirdo, computer warrior, loner. Get the fuck out of here.
So, someone takes the effort to attain information, create a graphical representation, and put it all together for educational purposes and all we do is critique her voice? What have we become? We don't need diseases to kill, our human nature is toxic enough. To the woman who narrated this video, job well done and I personally love your voice ❤️
Bruh someone suggested that you focus on the information presented instead of the person, and y'all went rabid at the idea. ironic given how the comment talked about toxicity
I actually got bitten by a rabid dog when I was a kid. I was about like 9 or 12 and it was right on the back side of my leg where the knee is 🦵🏽. I was walking to my bus for school when this random dog with foam from its mouth and red eyes bit and dragged me a good two feet before the bus driver helped. My leg was so weak I could barely put weight on it and I felt very tired after that. I immediately told my pops and I was rushed to the clinic where they gave me all the shots necessary. I had no idea how fatal and crazy Rabies can be so now I’m just so astonished that I survived this horrible infection and I used to have a gnarly scar where the bite mark was but it’s really hard to find now. I’m 23 years old today.
You were not infected, and judging by your claims of "Legs so weak" and "Very tired" is a good indicator your making this crap up! The first general symptom that is first presented is a tingling sensation in the affected area, there is no "Oh noes im so weak imma just pass out and wake up a zombie" stop making up serious shit such as this. And the bad part is a lot of people bought into your story! I hope you become the 0.001 percent that dies of raccon roundworm.
a lot scarier than covid. the fact that dogs living with you were 90% of the reason for infection is extremely worrisome. and that so many people died so fast from rabies, much faster rate than covid, scarry!!
Faster rate, less spread since the host die before spreading further. COVID, lives with you probably months or forever. Forever damage whatever to your body. Endlessly spreading I say both are equally scary in specific location, your body.
Only 5 people died of Rabies in the US last year. Worldwide it causes 59,000 deaths each year. Covid killed 3 Million people in 2020 alone. I think I know which one *I'm* scared of.
Inept comparison. Quick sweep on internet gave From CDC : 59000 death worldwide from rabies each year From WHO: 5.42 million death from January 2020 to December 2021. Rabies virus is scary by its symptoms and because without treatment it is a death sentence. The history of the rabie vaccine is quite interesting and give a good hindsight to anti vaccine thinking. Pasteur would have been stoned to death would have he failed. Also virus don't go airborne like that. It ain't Hollywood. Rabies is preventable and in majority affect populations in less developed countries.
Question: does the rabies virus cause aggression intentionally? It it a method of spreading in animals where it makes them more aggressive so they bite things and the virus spread?
I would say it’s intentional in that its the only reason the virus spreads. Remember that viruses evolve just like livings beings do. If a virus is not able to infect other things, it dies off. The aggression caused by rabies is a side effect that allows it to spread, but doesn’t mean the virus deliberately intends to make their hosts aggressive.
Oh also the aggression is intentional, what the virus does is make you much more erratic. Kinda like if you have been on a 9hr flight with multiple little crotch goblins crying and kicking your seat.
Rabies is one of the deadliest viruses known to man. It treatment is not administered before symptoms start, a horrible and painful death is pretty much certain!
Easy there all of the zombies had of been based on a grain of truth the apocalypse will happen and the world will bask In the fires of hell and the world will be cleansed will the ice of god
I was hoping to read some educational and interesting comments about this after seeing a rabid coyote but when I scrolled down, all I see is a bunch of negative comments saying "blow your nose"..... I think she would know if her nose is stuffed and would have done that before recording. 🙄 Can y'all be any more ignorant?? i dont know if she is sick or not but for me, my nose is smaller on the inside and I have asthma so when I talk, my voice is very soft and my words don't always articulate right so I find it very disrespectful reading all of these rude comments when she literally has nothing wrong and y'all are just judgemental af. If you don't like her voice, just say it and say why nicely. don't be like "blow your nose"... that's not how to talk to people especially when you don't even know what's actually going on or why she sounds that way. I'm pretty sure most of y'all wouldn't say that if y'all weren't hiding behind your computer screen 🤷♀️
My cat died from Rabies :C she was so kind my dad took her to the vet she got so scared she was so mean but she couldn’t help it she was in pain I miss her they had to put her down she was my best friend :C
Hey can you plz tell me the symptoms of your cat because my kitten also died 3 days ago and I think rabies infected him. I'm also unsure and didn't take vaccinations. Help me and I'm really sorry for your cat.
@@bobbyvishwas5755 why would you not get your cat vaccinated? Don't even use the "I don't have the money" excuse, many places will do it for free or just few bucks. I would more worry about the way you approached bringing the cat to it's death, irresponsible owner at it's finest. Stop being a bum and learn some responsibility fool.
@@rapscallion3421 Hey pal I think you did overthink and made up your own scenarios in your head. The day my kitten showed the symptoms,died the same night within 6 hrs. And where I live there are no veterinarian in about 100 km. Btw, I researched well and found that cats may develop neurological diseases at some point. It was a helpless situation indeed and I regret deeply. LASTLY, MY CAT DIDN'T DIE BECAUSE OF RABIES. THANK YOU AND HAVE A GOOD DAY 🙏
@@bobbyvishwas5755 well don't be on RU-vid crying about your cat and how irresponsible you were not to get it vacinated. "The only vet is 100km, we'll get in your car and drive if you care about your cat, otherwise we have a kitty like yours.....☠️☠️
I got bit by a bat at work today and was immediately sent by my boss to the emergency room. Now here I am watching this because the doctors are freaking me out saying it's very deadly
@@cj09811 yeah I'm good. Had to get a shitload of shots everywhere (and I mean everywhere). Apparently they used to give the vaccine to you via big ass shots to the stomach, so I think it turned out better.
I find it highly appropriate that lyssaviruses are shaped like bullets. Some points you forgot to cover: -Rabies vaccines MUST be administered BEFORE symptoms appear. Once symptoms do appear, the vaccine does no good. -If your fully vaccinated pet is exposed to rabies, you should quarantine it at home for 30-45 days. Your vet may recommend a post-exposure booster even if your pet recently had its regular booster. If your pet is NOT fully vaccinated, your vet or animal control may require that it be quarantined at a vet's office or shelter for six months. -Not all exposures to rabies are obvious. For example, if you find a bat in your room or your child's room, and you were not awake, alert or present when the bat got in, you must assume rabies exposure, even if you or your child have no visible bites or scratches. The same applies to an elderly person or person with disabilities who is left unattended with a bat, and who is unable to effectively determine or communicate whether they have been exposed. If you can SAFELY capture the bat or unvaccinated animal, you can turn it over to animal control for euthanization and testing (sadly, rabies tests can only be performed on animals postmortem). -Rabies in humans is no longer 100% fatal, even after symptoms appear. But once symptoms do appear, survival rates drop below 1%. Treatment of active human rabies involves putting the patient into a coma and managing the encephalitis that the rabies causes. This allows the disease to run its course and gives the patient a chance to recover. The younger the patient is, the better their chances of both survival and full recovery, due to the ability of a young brain to heal compared to an adult brain. Rabies survivors usually have to undergo extensive physical and cognitive therapy, and most have lifelong disabilities. -Rabies post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) costs around $20,000. However, the financial and emotional toll of human rabies is far, far greater, as you or your loved one will either suffer horrendously or be stuck in a coma for months, then, assuming you survive, have to endure expensive therapy for the rest of your life. If you've been exposed, get the PEP. You throw five to ten times more money at college than you will ever need to throw at avoiding one of the most terrifying diseases known to man. Financial help for PEP is often available, and sometimes the city or a pet owner will have to pay for it or reimburse you, depending on the circumstances of the exposure. -Only placental mammaloids (those that carry a baby to full term and are connected via a placenta, rather than using a pouch or laying eggs) are known to reliably carry and transmit rabies. There have been a very small handful of cases recorded in possums, but 95% of possums exposed to rabies will never develop the disease due to their low body temperatures. A form of rabies called Australian bat lyssavirus is endemic to Australia and is clinically identical to common rabies, but it has never been shown to infect Australia's marsupials. ABL is treated the same as common rabies, and the vaccine for common rabies carries the same effectiveness against ABL. -Birds, reptiles, amphibians and fish will never carry or transmit any sort of lyssavirus. So you don't have to worry about getting rabies from helping birds. -Lyssaviruses, including common rabies, originated in bats, which is why bats are considered a leading vector for rabies. Other common vectors in the US include skunks, raccoons and unvaccinated feral cats. Around the world, the leading rabies vector is stray or feral dogs. Rabies is considered a neglected tropical disease, as it is almost entirely preventable and still kills up to 150 people every day in developing countries. -Rabies is practically unheard of in rodents smaller than a marmot, because the bite that transmits the disease pretty much always kills the rodent. So your odds of getting rabies from a mouse or squirrel are practically zero. -About one out of every five rabies cases lacks the furious stage, in which the animal acts aggressive, fears water and foams at the mouth. This is why rabies and distemper, two deadly diseases in animals, can look so similar, and a postmortem test is needed to distinguish them. Distemper doesn't cause aggression at all, but it is a neurological disease that causes seizures. And it can affect your pets if they're not vaccinated against it. If you see an animal in clear neurological distress (having seizures, can't control its back legs, etc.), the best thing to do for it is to have it euthanized and tested. If it's a dog or cat, first determine whether it's someone's epileptic pet that got loose. And whenever possible, let animal control pick it up and determine whether euthanization is required. Never try to confront it yourself.
What is the dormancy period of rabies? I got attacked by three dogs 11 years ago and I'm now in constant worry and stress (seriously I'm often almost having a panic attack at the thought). I wasn't bitten as I was wearing heavy clothes but my jeans were shredded. No visible bites and scratches were seen. I would like advice since you offered such a detailed response. Thank you p.s I think I remember some of its drool getting into my face and area as I held it background my face.
@@budgetmicro5387 The record is eight years, but it was also an extreme outlier. Odds are the victim had untreated hypothyroidism, which dropped his temperature and increased the incubation period. The incubation period for 99.99% of the population reaches its absolute maximum at two years, and averages two months. If you were attacked in the US, Canada, Mexico or a developed island nation (e.g. the UK), you're fine. Canine rabies has been eradicated in those regions due to aggressive vaccination and/or quarantine programs, so it's rare for even stray dogs to have it. And rabid dogs never attack in packs.
Bro everyone thinks Australia is so dangerous but I'm scared of going to America. You got bears, mountain lions, rabies and every second unhinged person is walking around with a gun
No wonder dogs are haram in islam. There's a reason why we can't touch dogs....not saying we should hate them or kill them. Just saying we should avoid being around those animals. Wild ones that is.
Wild d0gs are wild d0gs and are something else from these other d0gs that you are speaking against. Those are natural, these other ones, the creepy ones, are nothing else than diseased mutants.
never knew rabies were fatal, thought it was just disease that make animals crazy, never thought it would be so potent to degenerate the human nervous system, scary disease
Um, no. Not scratches. The only way to contract rabies is by the saliva of an animal that has the virus active. Rabies is transmitted through saliva by the blood stream. It is 100% fatal once symptoms show. If you suspect you have been bitten by a rabid animal, try to catch the animal so it can be monitored/tested.
Should I get the shot or am I just a hypochondriac? Was in the backyard with my dad, who was brushing the pool with a broom. Evening, skies were cloudy and looked stormy to the right of where I was standing in the yard. Felt what felt like rainwater from a slight sprinkle land onto my wrist. (Which was possible, given the weather.) Looked down at my wrist, saw a slight, very tiny puff near an also miniature bullseye. Did not see anything fly at me, did not feel anything other than the, “bite.” There wasn’t any pain or itchiness, just the mark. The mark very shortly went away. Dad says that I was just imagining the wound and it was poolwater from whatever he was doing that landed on my wrist. I shouldn’t be stressed to tears that a tiny, rabid bat bit me and then flew away but here we are oh i forgot to mention - i live in gilbert, az, just to clarify
Yes, you can lose your mind, if it's not treated on time. Here, in US, we are lucky to have an available treatment in most hospitals, and that is 💯 effective most of the time. But that doesn't mean that every person infected, will receive it on time. Which hapens mostly in other countries, where communities live far from hospitals. If it takes too late also, the person will show lack of coordination, irrational phobia to water. The virus attacks the brain, and it's actually scarier than movies; videos are truly horrible. Also, it is mainly contracted by a bite, because the virus concentrates in the saliva of a contaminated carrier: dogs, cats, racoons, squirrels, and also, other humans. It can be also contracted by a scratch in some cases. Thank you for the video, it has nice illustrations.
No, they are not linked to each other at all. Sure they may both be degenerative diseases but, mad cows disease is a disease that is caused by prions whereas rabies is cause by a virus.
It alomst does the same. But I think the virus which is shown in the walking dead is impossible if something doesnt come from space. Nothing can reanimate brain.
I hope you reply, I’m so scared. Did it hurt? Are you healthy when you got bitten? I’m sonscared! I also got bitten in the fingers. Did you go to the doctors?
I wouldn't say it's transmitted to humans through ACCIDENTAL animal bites... Suspect more of the intentional ones, the unprovoked bites as they suggest aggressive behaviour from the animal
The goal of the virus is to survive and spread to other hosts. The virus modifies the brain to Be aggressive which is seen in animals with rabies. This modification of the virus fucks with your brain and that can usually lead to death but it' is very effective as The animal bites other animals to spread it Influence. The virus is so effecient at spreading that it infects faster than it kills.
If your bite was on the Calf area, how many weeks does it take to reach the brain? Also, if it tingles, will it take months to travel to the brain? It’s quite confusing
1: It's foaming at the mouth. 2: It wants to attack you. Simple as that.
3 года назад
Some animals act like they are drunk instead of trying to attack you. Going in circles, being out in a moment they should be hidden, falling and having seizures
Sorry for replying so late but did u get a cat?Also its an uncommon desease not every cat and dog has it.I have been bitten by a dog and have been scratched and bleed by cats many times and nothing happened
Why does it make make the host suffer from.hydrophobia were there is a complete and utter aversion to water and not let you swallow, what is going on there?
If the infected host cannot swallow, saliva builds up in their mouth and they begin to drool. The drool is contaminated with the rabies virus. If another mammal comes into contact with the drool, that provides a possible pathway for said animal to become infected, whether through injuries, small cuts, or through ingesting it during eating, grooming, etc. It’s also one of the reasons why rabid animals become aggressive and will try to bite- biting opens up a wound, and now saliva containing the rabies virus is being introduced directly into the other animal’s bloodstream.
@@jequirity1 All due respect but, you never answered the question, never explained why or how the the rabies gives the fear of swallowing water, you just explained the fact that it makes the sufferer display such a symptom, I already knew this as it was in the question. I understand this, I was wanting to know the mechanics or the processes of what, why and how rabies causes the complete aversion to the swallowing of water in the infected person, not just that rabies produce this aversion, I want to know the inner workings of how rabies stops the person being able to drink and why it does this, for example is water damaging to rabies which is why it stops the ability to swallow and does this by affecting the part of the brain which controls things like swallowing rendering the person unable to swallow. Now of course I know this isn't what happens it was just an example to show what I was asking. I'm after the what produces these affects not the affects themselves
One year ago I was going from the street then a bull which was dripping a lot of saliva while eating the garbage, he shook his mouth loudly and his saliva fell on my face, could I have rabies, even after a year no symptoms arise