What are other names for this medicine?
Type of medicine: vaccine
Generic and brand names: rabies vaccine; Imovax Rabies I.D.; Imovax
Rabies; RabAvert
What is this medicine used for?
This medicine is given by injection (shots) to protect against
rabies infection. The vaccine can be given before or after you are
exposed to the rabies virus.
You may be at risk for rabies if you:
- are a veterinarian
- work with animals
- travel to a country where rabies is common
What should my healthcare provider know before I take this
medicine?
Before receiving this medicine, tell your healthcare provider if
you have ever had:
- an allergic reaction to other vaccine shots or to any medicine
- a weakened immune system from diseases such as HIV/AIDS or from
taking immunosuppressants, anticancer medicines, radiation
therapy, transplant rejection medicine, or steroid medicines
such as prednisone
- a bleeding disorder or take medicine that reduces the chance of
blood clots forming
- treatment for rabies before
Tell your healthcare provider if you currently have an infection or
fever. Also tell your provider if you are being treated for
malaria.
Females of childbearing age: Tell your healthcare provider if you
are pregnant or plan to become pregnant. It is not known whether
this vaccine will harm an unborn baby. Do not breast-feed while
receiving this medicine without your healthcare provider's
approval.
How do I use it?
These shots are given by your healthcare provider. You must receive
several shots to be protected against rabies. If your risk of
exposure continues, you may need booster shots. Keep all
appointments for shots.
What should I watch out for?
You may have soreness, irritation, or pain on the skin where the
injection is given. If this continues for more than a couple of
days or becomes severe, call your healthcare provider.
What are the possible side effects?
Along with its needed effects, your medicine may cause some
unwanted side effects. Some side effects may be very serious. Some
side effects may go away as your body adjusts to the medicine. Tell
your healthcare provider if you have any side effects that continue
or get worse.
Life-threatening (Report these to your healthcare provider right
away. If you are unable to contact your healthcare provider right
away, get emergency medical care or call 911 for help): Allergic
reaction (hives, itching, rash, tightness in your chest, swelling
of your lips, tongue or throat, trouble breathing).
Serious (report these to your healthcare provider right away): High
fever, sore joints, unexplained weakness, paralysis, severe
headache or stiff neck, numbness in arms or legs.
Other: Muscle tenderness or stiffness where you get the injection,
nausea, headache, dizziness, slight fever.
What products might interact with this medicine?
When you take this medicine with other medicines, it can change the
way this or any of the other medicines work. Nonprescription
medicines, vitamins, natural remedies, and certain foods may also
interact. Using these products together might cause harmful side
effects. Tell your healthcare provider if you are taking:
- medicine that reduces the chance of blood clots forming such as
warfarin (Coumadin), heparin, dalteparin (Fragmin), and
enoxaparin sodium (Lovenox)
- corticosteroids such as cortisone (Cortone), betamethasone
(Celestone), dexamethasone, fludrocortisone (Florinef),
hydrocortisone (Cortef, Hydrocortone, A-HydroCort),
methylprednisolone (Medrol), prednisone (Meticorten),
prednisolone (Delta-Cortef), and triamcinolone (Aristocort,
Kenacort)
- immunosuppressants such as azathioprine (Imuran), cyclosporine
(Sandimmune, Neoral, Gengraf), sirolimus (Rapamune), and
tacrolimus (Prograf, Protopic)
- medicines used to treat cancer such as cisplatin (Platinol),
hydroxyurea (Hydrea), doxorubicin (Adriamycin, Rubex, Doxil),
vinblastine (Velban, Alkaban-AQ), and vincristine (Oncovin,
Vincasar)
- medicines used to treat malaria such as chloroquine (Aralen),
hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil), and mefloquine (Lariam)
- radiation therapy
Keep a record of all vaccines received and when you received them.
Keep a list of all your medicines with you. List all the
prescription medicines, nonprescription medicines, supplements,
natural remedies, and vitamins that you take. Be sure that you tell
all healthcare providers who treat you about all the products you
are taking.
This advisory includes selected information only and may not
include all side effects of this medicine or interactions with
other medicines. Ask your healthcare provider or pharmacist for
more information or if you have any questions.
Keep all medicines out of the reach of children.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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