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Case Reports
. 2023 Aug 24;12(1):78.
doi: 10.1186/s40249-023-01130-y.

Rabies outbreak in Brazil: first case series in children from an indigenous village

Affiliations
Case Reports

Rabies outbreak in Brazil: first case series in children from an indigenous village

Dilceu Silveira Tolentino Júnior et al. Infect Dis Poverty. .

Abstract

Background: Human rabies outbreak transmitted by bats continues to be a relevant public health problem not only in the Amazon region. The disease has affected one of the areas with the greatest poverty in southeastern Brazil, a region inhabited by the Maxakali indigenous people.

Case presentation: We describe four cases of rabies among indigenous children that occurred in the indigenous village of Pradinho, municipality of Bertópolis, Minas Gerais, Brazil. Cases were notified between April and May 2022, all of whom died on average eight days after the first symptoms. All cases were observed in rural residents under 12 years of age. The probable form of exposure was through bat bites. The predominant symptoms were prostration, fever, dyspnea, sialorrhea, tachycardia, and altered level of consciousness. Half of the cases underwent late and/or incomplete post-exposure rabies prophylaxis, however, the other half underwent pre-exposure rabies prophylaxis, with only one case completing the scheme and another undergoing the adapted Milwaukee Protocol (Recife Protocol). All cases ended in death.

Conclusions: This was the first rabies outbreak among indigenous people in Brazil. Among the manifested clinical forms in the series, there was a disease atypical presentation in at least one case. We suggest active surveillance and an intercultural educational campaign to prevent new cases.

Keywords: Brazil; Indigenous population; Low income; Outbreak; Rabies.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no confict of interest.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
The geographic location of the Pradinho indigenous village, Bertopolis, Minas Gerais, Brazil
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Timeline describing the four cases of rabies in indigenous children
Fig. 3
Fig. 3
Location of the lesions caused by a bat bite on the children: A Case 1: upper lip; B Case 2: right elbow

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