Is the human body resistant to the rabies virus?

The human body has no resistance to the rabies virus, and once the pathogen has triggered a rabies attack, the fatality rate of the disease is almost 100%. The rabies virus is a pathogen that causes rabies, a zoonotic infectious disease to which the population is universally susceptible and to which the patient will eventually die. The body is not resistant to the rabies virus. After entering the human body, the rabies virus first proliferates in small quantities in the muscle cells near the wound, then invades the peripheral nerves, and then invades the central nervous system and spreads to various organs, thus contributing to the formation and onset of rabies, and ultimately to the death of the patient. Although the body itself cannot effectively resist the rabies virus, individuals who are suspected to have been bitten by a diseased animal can be vaccinated against rabies to produce specific antibodies against the rabies virus, thus killing the virus and preventing the occurrence of rabies. If you have any symptoms of physical discomfort, you should go to the hospital and consult a physician for guidance.