Rabies vaccination for pregnant women has no effect on the fetal brain.
For pregnant women, if they are accidentally scratched by cats or bitten by dogs during pregnancy, as cats or dogs may carry the rabies virus in their bodies, the virus may pass through the mucous membranes of the skin after being bitten, thus entering the body of the woman and causing her to be infected with rabies.
Rabies has a high mortality rate, and once it develops, the patient is more likely to die. Therefore, prevention is more important than treatment. After the above situation, you can cooperate with your doctor to have rabies vaccination injection, mainly to prevent the emergence of rabies. No cases of maternal or infant damage due to vaccination with this product during pregnancy have been observed.
Some women may develop symptoms of adverse reactions such as dizziness, headache and fever after rabies vaccination, and are advised to go to hospital for observation and treatment. Regular and proper obstetric examination should be conducted to closely monitor the development of the fetus.