The Thai Red Cross intradermal post-exposure rabies prophylaxis regimen (TRC-ID) is being used in Thailand, the Philippines, Sri Lanka and is making inroads in India. It consists of two injections of 0.1 mL of any World Health Organization recommended tissue culture rabies vaccine intradermally at two sites on days 0, 3, 7, followed by one injection on days 28 and 90.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present study sought to determine whether increasing and accelerating rabies vaccine administration would result in earlier protective levels of neutralizing antibody. Results indicated that the 8-site and double-dose Thai Red Cross intradermal regimens produced higher antibody titers by day 14 but not significantly higher titers by days 5 and 7. Administration of rabies immunoglobulin into and around bite wounds on the first day of rabies prophylaxis should remain the optimal postexposure treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA rabid dog invaded a Thai pig farm and severely mauled 11 adult pigs. This offered an opportunity to study efficacy of a human type post-exposure vaccine regimen with and without rabies immunoglobulin. A commercial veterinary tissue culture rabies vaccine and equine rabies immune globulin were used.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStoring freshly reconstituted purified chick embryo rabies vaccine at 4 degrees C for 1 week allowed use of <1 ampoule of 1.0 mL for 1 patient for day 0, 3, and 7 immunizations, representing considerable savings in vaccine and also possibly allowing use of this cost-saving regimen in centers that see <1 rabies-exposed patient daily. The 90-day booster dose mandated in the current intradermal regimen may not be necessary if the day 28 dose is doubled, eliminating 1 clinic visit at no additional cost in vaccine.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF