Sunday 4 August 2013

Funny Cats With Lightsabers


Funny Cats With Lightsabers Definition

Source(google.com.pk)

Rabies is an inflammatory infection that specifically affects the gray matter of the cat's brain and its central nervous system (CNS). The primary way the rabies virus is transmitted to cats in the United States is through a bite from a disease carrier: foxes, raccoons, skunks, and bats. Infectious virus particles are retained in a rabid animal's salivary glands to better disseminate the virus through their saliva.

Once the virus enters the cat's body, it replicates in the cells of the muscles and then spreads to the closest nerve fibers, including all peripheral, sensory and motor nerves, traveling from there to the CNS via fluid within the nerves. The virus can take up to a month to develop, but once the symptoms have begun, the virus progresses rapidly.

This severe, and often fatal, viral polioencephalitis also has zoonotic characteristics, and can therefore be transmitted to humans. If you would like to learn more about how this disease affects dogs, please visit this page in the PetMD health library.

There are two forms of rabies: paralytic and furious. In the early symptom (prodomal) stage of rabies infection, the cat will show only mild signs of CNS abnormalities. This stage will last from one to three days. Most cats will then progress to either the furious stage, the paralytic stage, or a combination of the two, while others succumb to the infection without displaying any major symptoms.

Furious rabies is characterized by extreme behavioral changes, including overt aggression and attack behavior. Paralytic rabies, also referred to as dumb rabies, is characterized by weakness and loss of coordination in the cat, followed by paralysis.

This is a fast-moving virus. If it is not treated soon after the symptoms have begun, the prognosis is poor. Therefore, if your cat has been in a fight with another animal, or has been bitten or scratched by another animal, or if you have any reason to suspect that your pet has come into contact with a rabid animal (even if your pet has been vaccinated against the virus), you must take your cat to a veterinarian for preventive care immediately.

Funny Cats With Lightsabers


Funny Cats With Lightsabers

Funny Cats With Lightsabers

Funny Cats With Lightsabers

Funny Cats With Lightsabers

Funny Cats With Lightsabers

Funny Cats With Lightsabers

Funny Cats With Lightsabers

Funny Cats With Lightsabers

Funny Cats With Lightsabers

Funny Cats With Lightsabers

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