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Thread: Pet Bunny in NEED!!

  1. #1
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    Default Pet Bunny in NEED!!

    My granddaughters pet bunny's is making strange sounds in his upper chest area and has barely eaten today, can someone please watch the attached video and tell me if you think he has a respiratory infection.

    I have Bactrim, Cipro and Amoxi on hand.

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    Default Re: Pet Bunny in NEED!!

    Quote Originally Posted by Rhapsody View Post
    My granddaughters pet bunny's is making strange sounds in his upper chest area and has barely eaten today, can someone please watch the attached video and tell me if you think he has a respiratory infection.

    I have Bactrim, Cipro and Amoxi on hand.
    I'm not seeing a video Rhapsody
    Make the world a better place...one animal at a time



    The Peace of Wild Things
    BY WENDELL BERRY
    When despair for the world grows in me
    and I wake in the night at the least sound
    in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,
    I go and lie down where the wood drake
    rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
    I come into the peace of wild things
    who do not tax their lives with forethought
    of grief. I come into the presence of still water.
    And I feel above me the day-blind stars
    waiting with their light. For a time
    I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.

  3. #3
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    Default Re: Pet Bunny in NEED!!

    I am working on getting the video to load........ sec.

  4. #4
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    Default Re: Pet Bunny in NEED!!

    Here is the video....... Figaro (the bunny)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HREJ6bu3skE

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    Default Re: Pet Bunny in NEED!!

    Rhapsody I really have no clue what you can give your sweet lil bun bun...he's precious and definitely is in distress....I got this from a website Medirabbit ...maybe it can help...I did see cipro mentioned

    Treatment

    Respiratory tract diseases must be differentiated from a viral disease, a mechanical or neoplastic obstruction or hypersensitivity. If nothing is found and the presence of bacteria can be ruled out, the affected rabbit can be given antihistamines or corticosteroids (no longer than 3 to 5 days).
    Successful treatment of upper respiratory infection needs to be aggressive and long. Often a combination of antibiotics is used, like oral administration of enrofloxacin or ciprofloxacin, accompanied by gentamycin based nose drops.
    Trimethoprim sulfadiazine is a bactericidal antibiotic used in GI tract, respiratory and urinary infections, among others. It is efficacious against a range of bacteria that affect rabbits, including Pasteurella sp., Clostridia spp., Staphylococcus sp., Bordetella sp., etc. It can be used long term, low dose. This antibiotic often shows poor results in rabbits, and often the disease comes back worse once the treatment is stopped. This could relate to the fact that half-life of trimethoprim in a rabbit last only 40 min.
    Azythromycin, a modified erythromycin, that does not show the side effects of the later in rabbits, is very efficacious in the treatment of Bordetella sp. (and so is enrofloxacin). The azythromycin doses used for rabbits (50mg/kg PO QD (SID) is much higher than that used for other small animals like cats and dogs (5-8mg/kg). Treatment lasts generally 7 days, after which an evaluation is done and eventual prolongation decided.
    Cephalosporins are bactericidal broad-spectrum antibiotics used to treat skeletal, genital/urinary, skin and soft tissue bacterial and respiratory (associated with Pasteurella sp.) infections, among others. There are several generations of cephalosporin, each aiming a more or less specific group of bacteria. Although quite safe when used in injected form, this drug is potentially nephrotoxic.
    The therapy against Pseudomonas sp., one of the most difficult to treat infections, must be aggressive. A sensitivity test must be done, as this bacterium is known to be multiresistant to many antibiotics. Most successful treatments involve a combination of antibiotics, for example:
    Enrofloxacin + nasal drops of gentamycin;
    Enrofloxacin + nebulization of amikacin (if located in the upper respiratory enrofloxacin + doxycycline;
    Cephalosporin/tobramycin (both should be use in injected form only);
    Azithromycin is NOT effective against Pseudomonas sp.;
    Further antibiotics, safe for use in rabbits that have shown good results in the treatment of respiratory tract disease, include:
    Amikacin, injected subcutaneously or nebulization, is used to treat Gram-negative bacteria,
    Enrofloxacin (if injected, it can lead to the development of sterile abscesses. This can be avoided by diluting the solution with a sterile saline solution, 50:50),
    Chloramphenicol (exceptionally leads to a decreased appetite),
    Gentamycin, injected, drops, or nebulization, used to treat Gram-negative bacteria.
    For more information, see: Antibiotics *safe* for use in rabbits
    Aside a longer systemic antibiotic therapy, additional therapy comprises:
    · Nasolacrimal flushes;
    · Nebulization with a saline solution, mucolytics and antibiotics help bring the medication deep in the bronchia and lungs in cases of rhinitis, sinusitis or pneumonia;
    · Fluid therapy and assisted force-feeding, when the rabbit refuses to drink and eat.
    If the respiratory disease is accompanied by conjunctivitis and/or dacryocystitis, local antibiotic therapy (e.g. enrofloxacin, gentamycin) must accompany the treatment protocol.
    Make the world a better place...one animal at a time



    The Peace of Wild Things
    BY WENDELL BERRY
    When despair for the world grows in me
    and I wake in the night at the least sound
    in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,
    I go and lie down where the wood drake
    rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
    I come into the peace of wild things
    who do not tax their lives with forethought
    of grief. I come into the presence of still water.
    And I feel above me the day-blind stars
    waiting with their light. For a time
    I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.

  6. #6
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    Default Re: Pet Bunny in NEED!!

    This table was from House Rabbit Society's website...I sure hope this helps

    Table 1. Antibiotics Used in Pet Rabbits

    Antibiotic
    Injectable Use?
    Oral Use?
    Other Use?
    Risk of Antibiotic-Associated Diarrhea
    Amikacin
    Yes, with caution:
    nephrotoxic
    No oral form available
    Yes, impregnated in antibiotic beads
    Yes, in nebulization protocols
    Low
    Amoxicillin
    No
    No
    No
    High when given orally
    Ampicillin
    No
    No
    No
    High when given orally
    Azithromycin
    No injectible form available
    Yes
    No
    Low
    Cephalosporins (Ceftazidime, Cefazolin, Ceftiofur, Cefriaxone, Cephalexin, Cephaloridine, Cephalothin)
    Yes
    No
    No
    High when given orally
    CEFTIOFUR
    No
    No
    Yes, impregnated in antibiotic beads
    Low, when impregnated in antibiotic beads (bone abscess)
    Chloramphenicol
    Yes
    Yes
    Yes, ophthalmic ointment
    Low
    Ciprofloxacin
    Yes
    Yes
    Yes
    ophthalmic drops
    Low
    Clindamycin
    No
    No
    No
    High when given orally
    Difloxacin
    No
    Yes
    No
    Low
    Doxycycline
    Yes
    Yes
    No
    Low
    Enrofloxacin
    Yes
    Yes
    Yes; otic drops
    Low
    Fusidic Acid
    No
    No
    Yes, ophthalmic ointment
    Low when used as eye ointment
    Gentamicin
    With extreme caution:
    nephrotoxic
    With extreme caution:
    nephrotoxic
    Yes, ophthalmic drops, impregnated in antibiotic beads
    Yes, in nebulization protocols
    Low
    Lincomycin
    No
    No
    No
    High
    Marbofloxacin
    No
    Yes
    No
    Low
    Metronidazole
    No
    Yes
    Yes
    Low
    Oxytetracycline
    Yes
    No
    No
    Low
    Oral use not recommended, calcium in GI tract inactivates drug
    Penicillin (procaine)
    Yes
    No
    No
    High, when given orally or applied topically
    Penicillin (procaine and benzthiazine)
    Yes
    No
    No
    High, when given orally or applied topically
    Streptomycin
    No, nephrotoxic
    No
    No
    High
    Sulfadimethoxine
    No
    Yes
    No
    Low
    Tetracycline
    Yes
    No
    No
    Low
    Oral use not recommended, calcium in GI tract inactivates drug
    Tilmicosin
    No
    No
    No
    Risk of fatal adverse reaction: sudden cardiac arrest within ~30 minutes of administration
    Trimethoprim/
    sulphadiazine
    Yes
    Yes
    No
    Low
    Trimethoprim/
    sulfamethoxazole
    Yes
    Yes
    No
    Low
    Tobramycin
    No, nephrotoxic
    No
    Yes, impregnated in antibiotic beads
    Yes, ophthalmic and otic drops
    Low
    Tylosin
    Yes
    No
    No
    Unknown

    Well darn it didn't come out in table form...but you can see at the top it list the antibiotic then all the headings...oral, injectable etc. so you can look back an forth here's the website...that may be the easiest way to read it

    http://rabbit.org/appropriate-use-of...-in-rabbits-2/
    Make the world a better place...one animal at a time



    The Peace of Wild Things
    BY WENDELL BERRY
    When despair for the world grows in me
    and I wake in the night at the least sound
    in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,
    I go and lie down where the wood drake
    rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
    I come into the peace of wild things
    who do not tax their lives with forethought
    of grief. I come into the presence of still water.
    And I feel above me the day-blind stars
    waiting with their light. For a time
    I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.

  7. #7
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    Default Re: Pet Bunny in NEED!!

    I think that poor bunny is clearly in some type of respiratory distress. I have zero experience with rabbits but based on that video and the AB you, I would start Cipro ASAP. Cipro works really well and fast on squirrels with AP, hopefully you will see a difference in 24-48 hours if this is a bacterial lung infection. I hope some of our resident bunny experts see this and post up their thoughts but I would probably start Cipro in the meantime.
    See my wild squirrel adventures in the thread "Squirtle's yard!":
    https://thesquirrelboard.com/forums/...quirtle-s-Yard!

    Loving dad to Sir Max, 2017-2018. There is no foot so small that it cannot leave an imprint on this world.

    "Once in a while you get shown the light, In the strangest of places if you look at it right."
    -Grateful Dead

  8. #8
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    Default Re: Pet Bunny in NEED!!

    Is there anyone on tonight that can dose Cipro 500 mg for a bunny around 7 pounds?

  9. #9
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    Default Re: Pet Bunny in NEED!!

    Did you get the dosage figured out. I had a bun with chronic URI and we treated with SMZ or Baytril.

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