Krebs J W, Smith J S, Rupprecht C E, Childs J E
Viral and Rickettsial Zoonoses Branch, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA.
J Am Vet Med Assoc. 1997 Dec 15;211(12):1525-39.
In 1996, 49 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico reported 7,124 cases of rabies in non-human animals and 4 cases in human beings to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Nearly 92% (6,550 cases) were wild animals, whereas 8% (574 cases) were domestic species. The total number of reported cases decreased 9.6% from that of 1995 (7,881 cases). Although much of the decline was the result of fewer reported cases of rabies in raccoons, fewer cases were also reported among most groups of animals. Numbers of cases associated with separate epizootics of rabies in foxes in west central Texas and in dogs and coyotes in southern Texas attributable to canine variants have declined, with 56.2% fewer rabid foxes (60), 72.7% fewer rabid dogs (15), and 76.3% fewer rabid coyotes (19) during 1996, compared with cases of rabies reported among these same species during 1995. Nationally, the number of reported rabid bats (741) decreased 5.8%, with cases reported by 46 of the 48 contiguous states. Four Eastern Seaboard states, enzootic for the raccoon variant of the rabies virus, reported noteworthy increases in total numbers of reported cases: Maine (29.7%; 101 cases in 1995 to 131 in 1996), Maryland (44.2%; 441 to 636), North Carolina (59.0%; 466 to 741), and Virginia (33.3%; 459 to 612). Increases were also reported by Florida (6.4%; 251 to 267) and Georgia (3.1%; 294 to 303). Cats continued to be the domestic animal most frequently reported rabid, but reported cases of rabies in cats (266), cattle (131), and dogs (111) decreased by 7.6%, 3.7%, and 24.0%, respectively. Thirty-one states and the District of Columbia reported decreases in rabies in animals during 1996, compared with 18 states and Puerto Rico in 1995. Hawaii was the only state that did not report a case of rabies in 1996. Two indigenously acquired cases of rabies reported in human beings were the result of infection with rabies virus variants associated with bats, whereas the remaining 2 human rabies infections were acquired outside the United States, and the variants identified were consistent with those associated with rabid dogs.
1996年,49个州、哥伦比亚特区和波多黎各向疾病控制与预防中心报告了7124例非人类动物狂犬病病例和4例人类狂犬病病例。近92%(6550例)为野生动物,而8%(574例)为家畜。报告的病例总数比1995年(7881例)减少了9.6%。虽然病例数下降主要是浣熊狂犬病报告病例减少所致,但大多数动物群体的病例数也有所减少。得克萨斯州中西部狐狸狂犬病单独流行以及得克萨斯州南部狗和郊狼因犬类变种狂犬病的病例数下降,与1995年这些相同物种报告的狂犬病病例相比,1996年狂犬病狐狸减少了56.2%(60只),狂犬病狗减少了72.7%(15只),狂犬病郊狼减少了76.3%(19只)。在全国范围内,报告的狂犬病蝙蝠数量(741只)减少了5.8%,48个相邻州中有46个州报告了病例。四个狂犬病病毒浣熊变种的地方性流行的东部沿海州报告的病例总数显著增加:缅因州(29.7%;从1995年的101例增至1996年的131例)、马里兰州(44.2%;从441例增至636例)、北卡罗来纳州(59.0%;从466例增至741例)和弗吉尼亚州(33.3%;从459例增至612例)。佛罗里达州(6.4%;从251例增至267例)和佐治亚州(3.1%;从294例增至303例)也报告了病例增加。猫仍然是报告狂犬病最多的家畜,但猫(266例)、牛(131例)和狗(111例)的狂犬病报告病例分别减少了7.6%、3.7%和24.0%。与1995年18个州和波多黎各相比,1996年有31个州和哥伦比亚特区报告动物狂犬病病例减少。夏威夷是1996年唯一未报告狂犬病病例的州。报告的2例人类本土感染狂犬病病例是感染了与蝙蝠相关的狂犬病病毒变种所致,而其余2例人类狂犬病感染是在美国境外获得的,鉴定出的变种与狂犬病狗相关的变种一致。