Updated
Updated · Bored Panda · Jul 3
Journal Details 11-Year-Old Canadian Boy's Rabies Death After Bat Exposure
Updated
Updated · Bored Panda · Jul 3

Journal Details 11-Year-Old Canadian Boy's Rabies Death After Bat Exposure

3 articles · Updated · Bored Panda · Jul 3

Summary

  • A Canadian Medical Association Journal case study says an 11-year-old boy died in 2024 after rabies was recognized only after his condition rapidly deteriorated following bat exposure.
  • Nineteen days after waking with a bat on his face at an Ontario cottage, he developed facial tingling and swelling, but clinicians first treated Bell's palsy and then suspected herpes-related illness.
  • Rabies was considered only after he returned to hospital with slurred speech, hallucinations and worsening neurologic symptoms; PCR confirmed infection on the fourth day of admission, and he died on day 17.
  • The report says the death was likely preventable because post-exposure prophylaxis is nearly 100% effective before symptoms begin, while rabies is almost always fatal once symptoms appear.
  • Bats can leave no obvious bite marks, the authors noted, underscoring public health advice to seek immediate care after any close bat contact.

Insights

A boy died from rabies despite no bite mark. What is the fatal blind spot this case exposes in modern medicine?
If a bat touches you without leaving a mark, could you be unknowingly facing a death sentence?