Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5793167 | Preventive Veterinary Medicine | 2016 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
Data of 98 rabies cases in dogs and cats from the 1948-1954 rabies epidemic in Tokyo were used to estimate the probability distribution of the incubation period. Lognormal, gamma and Weibull distributions were used to model the incubation period. The maximum likelihood estimates of the mean incubation period ranged from 27.30 to 28.56 days according to different distributions. The mean incubation period was shortest with the lognormal distribution (27.30 days), and longest with the Weibull distribution (28.56 days). The best distribution in terms of AIC value was the lognormal distribution with mean value of 27.30 (95% CI: 23.46-31.55) days and standard deviation of 20.20 (15.27-26.31) days. There were no significant differences between the incubation periods for dogs and cats, or between those for male and female dogs.
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Authors
Kageaki Tojinbara, K. Sugiura, A. Yamada, I. Kakitani, N.C.L. Kwan, K. Sugiura,