Posts Tagged ‘Ponderosa Campground’

Bear Brains

June 25th, 2012

Some of our Laboratory scientists (Kathryn Fitzpatrick, Alexandra Bhatti, Heather Bickley and Charles Martin) are busy right now testing the brains of the 2 bears that were destroyed over the weekend to see if they had rabies.  You might have heard about the bear attacks, which happened in and around Payson recently. On Sunday, a Tempe man was attacked by a bear in his tent in Ponderosa Campground which is about 12 miles E. of Payson on Hwy. 260 (my family camps there every Halloween).  Last Friday a bear attacked a guy sleeping in his cabin under construction near Payson.  Last month a bear attacked a woman also at Ponderosa. 

It’s important to know if the bears were infected because if they were, then the people that were attacked definitely need a rabies vaccine and immunoglobulin. If the bears don’t have rabies then the patients don’t need the vaccine.  Rabies is pretty much 100% fatal if an exposed person doesn’t get a vaccine in time.  Also, by testing the DNA from the saliva etc. from the bears and matching it to the residue left after the attacks, we can tell whether Fish & Game got the right bears.  By the way- if you’re my age, you might think that the rabies vaccine and immunoglobulin is a series of shots with real long needles in the stomach.  It is a series of shots- but it’s not in the stomach anymore (but the immunoglobulin is real expensive- about $10K). 

Here’s how the lab test works.  We get the heads of the animal from Fish & Game and our team of scientists extract the brain tissue.  We use what’s called a fluorescent antibody stain on the brain tissue to see if the antibodies latch onto rabies viruses.  If they latch on- the antibodies “light up” and our lab scientists can confirm under a microscope that the rabies virus was in the brain tissue.  We’ll have results by morning. 

By the way- it would be rare for a bear to be infected with rabies because they’re not a common “reservoir” like foxes or bats.  But it can happen- especially if a rabid fox attacked the bear awhile back.