“Doctor, I completed my full intradermal ARV vaccination schedule on 7-12-2025. About 9 days ago, while walking in a dark area where bats usually fly, something very small fell into my mouth for a few seconds. I did not feel any bite or scratch. After 1–2 days I got a mild fever, which worried me. I am anxious whether this incident is risky even though I am fully vaccinated. I am class 10th and can't focus on studies
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I totally understand your concern. Before suggesting treatment, I would like to ask a few questions to ensure the correct management can be provided.
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Dr. Harichandana,
MBBS, MD (General medicine)
If you want to discuss your problem in more detail, feel free to message me on WhatsApp at nine one one nine two five five six nine nine for a detailed free discussion
You completed your full intradermal rabies vaccination schedule (pre-exposure or post-exposure) on December 7, 2025 — that’s only about 1 month and 12 days ago (very recent!). This means you are fully protected with strong immunity right now.
The incident you described — a very small unknown thing falling into your mouth for a few seconds in a dark bat area, no bite, no scratch, no pain, no visible wound — is extremely low risk for rabies transmission. Rabies virus spreads mainly through bites (saliva into broken skin) or direct saliva contact with mucous membranes/open wounds. Swallowing something small (like droppings, insect, or saliva droplet) without known direct bat saliva contact or injury is not considered a typical exposure.
Many guidelines (CDC, WHO) say non-bite exposures are rare and almost never proven to cause rabies unless there’s clear saliva on mucous membranes or open skin.
Your mild fever 1-2 days later is very common with anxiety/stress, viral cold, or even unrelated — it’s not a sign of rabies (rabies symptoms start weeks to months later and are severe). Since you’re fully vaccinated recently, even if there was tiny theoretical risk, your immunity would handle it very well. This is not a high-risk situation that needs extra PEP.
Next Steps
• You do NOT need additional rabies vaccine doses or booster right now — your recent full schedule gives excellent protection (immunity is strong for years, and for recent vaccination, no extra is required for low-risk events).
• To ease your anxiety completely (which is affecting your studies — very understandable at Class 10!):
• Visit a doctor (infectious disease specialist, or your vaccinating doctor) for a quick reassurance consultation — they can confirm this is low/no risk and help calm your mind.
• If still very worried, they might suggest a simple rabies antibody titer test (blood test) in a few weeks/months to show your immunity is good (but not urgent).
• Focus on relaxing: Talk to parents/teacher about your worry — sometimes just sharing helps. If anxiety stays high, consider school counselor for study focus.
• No need for emergency/PEP unless new symptoms like severe headache, confusion, fear of water (rabies signs — but these are rare and come much later).
Health Tips
• Avoid dark bat areas at night if possible, and use torch/phone light when walking.
• For peace of mind: Gargle with water/salt water after such incidents (though not needed medically here).
• Reduce anxiety for studies: Take short breaks, deep breathing (inhale 4 sec, hold 4, exhale 4), study in bright room with friends, limit googling rabies (it increases fear!).
• Eat well, sleep 8 hours, walk/exercise daily — this helps fever go away and improves focus.
You’re doing great by being careful and getting vaccinated — this incident is almost certainly safe. For more personal reassurance based on exact details, please consult with me online — I can guide you or explain what to tell the doctor.
You can focus on studies now — you’ll do well! Stay strong
If you want to discuss your problem in more detail, kindly pay online consultation fee and feel free to message me on WhatsApp at nine zero four four five one one two nine nine for a detailed discussion ,
Disclaimer : The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding your medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website.
Disclaimer : The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding your medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website.
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