Krebs John W, Noll Heather R, Rupprecht Charles E, Childs James E
Viral and Rickettsial Zoonoses Branch, Division of Viral and Rickettsial Diseases, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1600 Clifton Rd NE, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA.
J Am Vet Med Assoc. 2002 Dec 15;221(12):1690-701. doi: 10.2460/javma.2002.221.1690.
During 2001, 49 states and Puerto Rico reported 7,437 cases of rabies in nonhuman animals and 1 case in a human being to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an increase of < 1% from 7,364 cases in nonhuman animals and 5 human cases reported in 2000. More than 93% (6,939 cases) were in wild animals, whereas 6.7% (497 cases) were in domestic species (compared with 93.0% in wild animals and 6.9% in domestic species in 2000). The number of cases reported in 2001 increased among bats, cats, skunks, rodents/lagomorphs, and swine and decreased among dogs, cattle, foxes, horses/mules, raccoons, and sheep/goats. The relative contributions of the major groups of animals were as follows: raccoons (37.2%; 2,767 cases), skunks (30.7%; 2,282), bats (17.2%; 1,281), foxes (5.9%; 437), cats (3.6%; 270), dogs (1.2%; 89), and cattle (1.1%; 82). Nine of the 19 states where the raccoon-associated variant of the rabies virus has been enzootic reported decreases in the numbers of rabid raccoons during 2001. Among states with extensive wildlife rabies control programs, Ohio reported (other than rabies in bats) 1 case of rabies in a raccoon that was associated with the epizootic of rabies in raccoons and 1 case in a bovid that was infected with a bat variant of the rabies virus, compared with no cases reported in any terrestrial animals during 2000. Texas reported 1 case associated with the dog/coyote variant of the rabies virus (compared with no cases in 2000) and 20 cases associated with the gray fox variant of the virus (a decrease of 50% from reported cases in 2000). Reports of rabid skunks in Massachusetts and Rhode Island, states with enzootic raccoon rabies, exceeded reports of rabid raccoons for the fifth consecutive year. A similar situation may soon exist in the state of Maine (32 rabid skunks and 34 rabid raccoons during 2001). Nationally, the number of rabies cases in skunks during 2001 increased by 2.7% over those reported in 2000. Texas reported the greatest number of rabid skunks ever documented during a single year by any state, as well as the greatest numerical increase in rabid skunks (778 cases in 2001, compared with 550 in 2000; an increase of 228 cases, or 41.5%) and the largest overall state total of rabies cases (1,043) during 2001. Arizona reported the greatest percentage increase in rabid skunks (247.1%), representing an increase from 17 rabid skunks in 2000 to 59 in 2001. Nineteen of these cases were infected with a bat variant of the rabies virus, documenting a spillover event followed by unprecedented detection of temporal enzootic transmission of a bat variant in a terrestrial species. The number of cases of rabies reported in bats during 2001 (1,281 cases) increased 3.3% and surpassed the previous year's record (1,240 cases) as the largest number of reported cases ever recorded for this group of mammals. Cases of rabies reported in dogs (89) and cattle (82) decreased by 21.9 and 1.2%, respectively; these are the lowest numbers reported for rabid cattle and dogs since the dawn of national rabies record keeping (ca 1938). Cases in cats (270) increased by 8.4% over those reported in 2000, whereas rabies among sheep and goats declined 70%, from 10 cases in 2000 to 3 cases (goats only) in 2001. Rabies among horses and mules declined 1.9% (52 cases in 2000 to 51 cases in 2001). Reported cases of rabies in mongooses in Puerto Rico increased 18.6%, compared with the previous year (70 cases in 2001 from 59 cases in 2000), whereas cases of rabies in dogs declined 15.3% (15 to 13). One case of rabies in a human being reported by California during 2001 was the result of infection with a canine variant of the rabies virus acquired outside the United States.
2001年,49个州和波多黎各向疾病控制与预防中心报告了7437例非人类动物狂犬病病例和1例人类狂犬病病例,与2000年报告的7364例非人类动物狂犬病病例和5例人类病例相比,增长幅度小于1%。超过93%(6939例)的病例发生在野生动物中,而6.7%(497例)发生在家养动物中(2000年野生动物占93.0%,家养动物占6.9%)。2001年报告的病例数在蝙蝠、猫、臭鼬、啮齿动物/兔形目动物和猪中有所增加,在狗、牛、狐狸、马/骡子、浣熊和绵羊/山羊中有所减少。主要动物群体的相对占比情况如下:浣熊(37.2%;2767例)、臭鼬(30.7%;2282例)、蝙蝠(17.2%;1281例)、狐狸(5.9%;437例)、猫(3.6%;270例)、狗(1.2%;89例)和牛(1.1%;82例)。在狂犬病病毒浣熊相关变种呈地方流行性的19个州中,有9个州报告2001年狂犬病浣熊数量有所减少。在实施广泛野生动物狂犬病控制项目的州中,俄亥俄州报告(除蝙蝠狂犬病外)1例与浣熊狂犬病流行相关的浣熊狂犬病病例和1例感染狂犬病病毒蝙蝠变种的牛科动物狂犬病病例,而2000年未报告任何陆生动物狂犬病病例。得克萨斯州报告1例与狂犬病病毒犬/郊狼变种相关的病例(2000年无病例报告)和20例与该病毒灰狐变种相关的病例(比2000年报告的病例数减少50%)。在浣熊狂犬病呈地方流行性的马萨诸塞州和罗德岛州,狂犬病臭鼬的报告数量连续第五年超过狂犬病浣熊。缅因州可能很快也会出现类似情况(2001年有32例狂犬病臭鼬和34例狂犬病浣熊)。在全国范围内,2001年臭鼬狂犬病病例数比2000年报告的病例数增加了2.7%。得克萨斯州报告的狂犬病臭鼬数量是任何一个州单年记录中最多的,狂犬病臭鼬数量的净增加数也是最多的(2001年有778例,2000年有550例;增加了228例,即41.5%),2001年该州狂犬病病例总数也是最高的(1043例)。亚利桑那州报告的狂犬病臭鼬百分比增幅最大(247.1%),从2000年的17例狂犬病臭鼬增至2001年的59例。其中19例感染了狂犬病病毒的蝙蝠变种,记录了一次溢出事件,随后在陆生动物中前所未有的检测到蝙蝠变种的短暂地方流行传播。2001年报告的蝙蝠狂犬病病例数(1281例)增加了3.3%,超过了上一年的记录(1240例),成为该类哺乳动物报告病例数最多的一年。报告的犬狂犬病病例(89例)和牛狂犬病病例(82例)分别减少了21.9%和1.2%;这些是自全国开始记录狂犬病(约1938年)以来狂犬病牛和犬报告数量最少的。猫狂犬病病例(270例)比2000年报告的病例数增加了8.4%,而绵羊和山羊狂犬病病例从2000年的10例降至2001年的3例(仅山羊),降幅为70%。马和骡子的狂犬病病例减少了1.9%(从2000年的52例降至2001年的51例)。波多黎各报告的食蟹猴狂犬病病例比上一年增加了18.6%(从2000年的59例增至2001年的70例),而犬狂犬病病例减少了15.3%(从15例降至13例)。加利福尼亚州2001年报告的1例人类狂犬病病例是感染了在美国境外获得的狂犬病病毒犬变种的结果。