Messenger Sharon L, Smith Jean S, Orciari Lillian A, Yager Pamela A, Rupprecht Charles E
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Emerg Infect Dis. 2003 Feb;9(2):151-4. doi: 10.3201/eid0902.020083.
Most human rabies deaths in the United States can be attributed to unrecognized exposures to rabies viruses associated with bats, particularly those associated with two infrequently encountered bat species (Lasionycteris noctivagans and Pipistrellus subflavus). These human rabies cases tend to cluster in the southeastern and northwestern United States. In these regions, most rabies deaths associated with bats in nonhuman terrestrial mammals are also associated with virus variants specific to these two bat species rather than more common bat species; outside of these regions, more common bat rabies viruses contribute to most transmissions. The preponderance of rabies deaths connected with the two uncommon L. noctivagans and P. subflavus bat rabies viruses is best explained by their evolution of increased viral infectivity.
在美国,大多数人类狂犬病死亡病例可归因于未被识别的与蝙蝠相关的狂犬病病毒暴露,特别是与两种罕见蝙蝠物种(银毛蝙蝠和淡黄蝠)相关的暴露。这些人类狂犬病病例往往集中在美国东南部和西北部。在这些地区,非人类陆生哺乳动物中与蝙蝠相关的大多数狂犬病死亡也与这两种蝙蝠物种特有的病毒变体有关,而不是与更常见的蝙蝠物种有关;在这些地区之外,更常见的蝙蝠狂犬病病毒导致了大多数传播。与两种不常见的银毛蝙蝠和淡黄蝠狂犬病病毒相关的狂犬病死亡占多数,这最好用它们病毒传染性增加的进化来解释。