Introduction: Who Should Undergo Diagnostics and When
If you’ve been bitten or scratched by an animal, or if an animal’s saliva has come into contact with your eyes, nose, mouth, or an open wound, you should seek medical help immediately. Rabies diagnostics become essential in these situations because the disease is nearly 100% fatal once symptoms begin, but it can be prevented with prompt treatment before symptoms develop.[1]
Anyone who has had contact with potentially rabid animals should consider seeking evaluation. In the United States, the animals most frequently found with rabies include bats, raccoons, skunks, and foxes. Contact with infected bats is actually the leading cause of human rabies deaths in the country, with at least seven out of ten people who die from rabies in the United States having been infected by bats.[1] Even if you don’t see a bite mark, you should get checked if you wake up to find a bat in your room, as bat bites can be so small they’re not noticed.[3]
Children are at higher risk than adults and should be evaluated immediately after any suspicious animal contact. Globally, around 40% of rabies deaths occur in children under 15 years of age.[2] This happens because children tend to interact more closely with animals and may not report bites or scratches right away.
People traveling to parts of Asia, Africa, or certain areas of Central and South America should be especially cautious. In these regions, rabies in dogs remains a major problem, and more than 95% of the estimated 59,000 human deaths worldwide each year occur in Asia and Africa. Since 1990, more than 80 people in the United States have died after being infected with rabies during travel abroad.[1]
Healthcare professionals recommend that you seek evaluation immediately if you’ve been exposed to any mammal that might carry rabies, particularly if the animal was acting strangely. Unusual behavior might include a wild animal that seems unusually friendly or tame, appears during daytime when it’s normally active at night, acts aggressively without provocation, staggers, makes unusual sounds, or seems to have difficulty moving.[8]
Classic Diagnostic Methods for Identifying Rabies
Diagnosing rabies in humans before symptoms appear is challenging because there is no simple, quick test that can definitively tell whether you’ve been infected during the incubation period—the time between exposure and when symptoms start, which usually lasts from one to three months but can vary from less than one week to more than one year.[5] This is why healthcare providers focus on assessing your risk of exposure rather than trying to test for the virus itself immediately after a bite.
When you visit a healthcare provider after potential rabies exposure, they will conduct a thorough evaluation that includes taking a detailed history of the incident. They will ask you about the type of animal involved, whether the animal appeared sick or was behaving abnormally, the circumstances of the bite or scratch, and whether you can provide information about the animal’s vaccination status if it was a pet.[17]
One of the most important diagnostic steps happens outside your body—it involves observing or testing the animal that bit you. If the animal can be captured safely, it may be observed for signs of rabies or tested directly. For domestic animals like dogs, cats, and ferrets, a ten-day observation period is often used. If the animal remains healthy during this time, it did not have rabies at the time of the bite, and you won’t need treatment.[20]
If the animal dies, becomes sick, or was killed, laboratory testing can be performed on its brain tissue to definitively determine whether it had rabies. This testing is done at specialized public health laboratories and involves looking for the rabies virus in the animal’s brain using a technique called direct fluorescent antibody testing, which can detect rabies virus proteins.[7]
When an animal cannot be found or tested—for example, if a bat escapes after possible contact—healthcare providers must make a decision based on the risk assessment. In these cases, they will consider factors such as the type of animal, whether rabies is common in that species in your area, and the nature of your contact with the animal.
If you begin showing symptoms that might be rabies, diagnostic testing becomes more direct but also more complex. Your doctor may order several different tests, though these may need to be repeated to confirm the diagnosis. Tests performed on humans suspected of having rabies include examining samples of saliva, blood serum, spinal fluid, and skin biopsies from the back of the neck. A skin biopsy involves taking a small sample of skin tissue, usually from an area with hair follicles, to look for rabies virus.[10]
Blood and spinal fluid tests look for antibodies that your immune system produces in response to the rabies virus. However, these antibodies may not appear immediately, which is why tests sometimes need to be repeated. Saliva samples are tested directly for the presence of the virus.[4]
It’s important to understand that once symptoms of rabies appear, the focus shifts from diagnosis to supportive care, as there is no effective cure at that stage. This is why prevention and early treatment are so critically important.
Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification
Currently, there is no standard information available in the provided sources about specific diagnostic tests or methods used as criteria for enrolling patients in rabies clinical trials. This may be because rabies treatment after symptom onset has such a poor prognosis that clinical trials for treatment are extremely rare. The focus of medical intervention remains almost entirely on prevention through vaccination before symptoms develop.[1]
Most research and clinical work related to rabies focuses on improving prevention methods, such as developing better vaccines or more accessible post-exposure treatments, rather than treating active infections. When clinical trials do occur, they typically involve testing new rabies vaccines or prevention protocols rather than treatments for people who already have symptoms.




