Jungle Dwellers' Anti-Rabies Blood Stuns Researchers

A bat bares its teeth.
This bat is a member of the species Eptesicus fuscus (Big brown bat), which are found in the U.S.
(Image credit: Bat photo via Shutterstock)

Some people living in a remote part of the Amazon jungle produce antibodies against the rabies virus, according to a new study. Protection against the highly deadly disease was previously thought to be impossible without vaccination.

Researchers took blood samples from 63 people in Peru, and seven of them were found to have antibodies that could fight a rabies infection. One of the seven had previously been given the rabies vaccine, but the other six present a medical mystery to the researchers, who are trying to understand how these antibodies developed.

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MyHealthNewsDaily Staff Writer