The manifestations of an attack in a rabid person include symptoms such as fear of water, fear of wind, and muscle spasms.
1. Invasive phase: Before the emergence of the excited state, most patients present with low-grade fever, loss of appetite, nausea, headache, fatigue, and malaise, similar to a cold. Early symptoms of diagnostic significance are abnormal sensations in and around the wound, numbness, itching, pain, and an ant-walking sensation, which are caused by neuronal stimulation during viral reproduction.
2. Excitation phase: the patient gradually enters a state of high excitement, which may be characterized by extreme fear, fear of water, fear of wind, paroxysmal pharyngeal muscle spasms, and difficulty in urination.
3. Paralytic phase: the patient’s excitement symptoms stop, and then paralytic symptoms will appear. The performance is quiet and no longer sensitive to external stimuli. The patient gradually suffers from eye movement disorder and expressionlessness, and will gradually develop into respiratory muscle paralysis and cardiac arrest.
When there is a rabies patient seizure manifestation, it is recommended to go to the hospital in time to receive treatment.