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Rabbit folks...

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houserabbitantibiotic
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  • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

    Rabbit folks...

    George started displaying symptoms of his upper respiratory infection coming back. The vet had previously said that he might live the rest of his life with a low-level infection, but I don't know if this counts as low-level, so I'm taking him back to the vet tomorrow, the soonest I could get him in.

    I'm wondering if any of you are particularly knowledgeable about antibiotics in our buns? I've always heard from vets that there were only "a couple" that were appropriate for rabbit use, but the House Rabbit Society - rabbit.org - has this article which lists a bunch more (it also includes a bunch you can't use). Anyone have any opinions on this?
    https://rabbit.org/health/appropriate-use-of-antibiotics-in-rabbits/

    George has already been through enrofloxacin ("Baytril") with steroids when he was at the Small Animal Clinic in Saskatoon last fall, and then oral ciprofloxacin ("Ciloxan") and injected penicillin from two more rounds from our vet here in town. Obviously getting a culture done to confirm what drug will affect it will be best, and I'll try for that, but I'm wondering whether I should be pushing for any of the other medications from this article if they just want to do more of what he's already had so far.

    [argh: hit some key combination which lost long message I'd typed; apologies if this re-write sounds frustrated]

    #HouseRabbit #antibiotic

    curtadams@urbanists.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
    curtadams@urbanists.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
    curtadams@urbanists.social
    wrote last edited by
    #4

    @cazabon I would say you'd want a culture to find out what bacteria it is (or are) and what it's sensitive to. Just chucking antibiotics and hoping something works doesn't seem to be working.

    That said, you can't cure all bacterial infections with antibiotics. For example, sometimes nothing cures human sinus infections.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

      Rabbit folks...

      George started displaying symptoms of his upper respiratory infection coming back. The vet had previously said that he might live the rest of his life with a low-level infection, but I don't know if this counts as low-level, so I'm taking him back to the vet tomorrow, the soonest I could get him in.

      I'm wondering if any of you are particularly knowledgeable about antibiotics in our buns? I've always heard from vets that there were only "a couple" that were appropriate for rabbit use, but the House Rabbit Society - rabbit.org - has this article which lists a bunch more (it also includes a bunch you can't use). Anyone have any opinions on this?
      https://rabbit.org/health/appropriate-use-of-antibiotics-in-rabbits/

      George has already been through enrofloxacin ("Baytril") with steroids when he was at the Small Animal Clinic in Saskatoon last fall, and then oral ciprofloxacin ("Ciloxan") and injected penicillin from two more rounds from our vet here in town. Obviously getting a culture done to confirm what drug will affect it will be best, and I'll try for that, but I'm wondering whether I should be pushing for any of the other medications from this article if they just want to do more of what he's already had so far.

      [argh: hit some key combination which lost long message I'd typed; apologies if this re-write sounds frustrated]

      #HouseRabbit #antibiotic

      B This user is from outside of this forum
      B This user is from outside of this forum
      bria@nerdculture.de
      wrote last edited by
      #5

      @cazabon

      Our rabbit get marbofloxacine after another antibiotic didn't work for his nasal infection, and it heal him.
      But as other comments point it, wait for the culture as every situation is different.

      We also find that it could be temperature dependent, and raising the "night" temperature of the house seems to help.

      cazabon@mindly.socialC 1 Reply Last reply
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      • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

        Rabbit folks...

        George started displaying symptoms of his upper respiratory infection coming back. The vet had previously said that he might live the rest of his life with a low-level infection, but I don't know if this counts as low-level, so I'm taking him back to the vet tomorrow, the soonest I could get him in.

        I'm wondering if any of you are particularly knowledgeable about antibiotics in our buns? I've always heard from vets that there were only "a couple" that were appropriate for rabbit use, but the House Rabbit Society - rabbit.org - has this article which lists a bunch more (it also includes a bunch you can't use). Anyone have any opinions on this?
        https://rabbit.org/health/appropriate-use-of-antibiotics-in-rabbits/

        George has already been through enrofloxacin ("Baytril") with steroids when he was at the Small Animal Clinic in Saskatoon last fall, and then oral ciprofloxacin ("Ciloxan") and injected penicillin from two more rounds from our vet here in town. Obviously getting a culture done to confirm what drug will affect it will be best, and I'll try for that, but I'm wondering whether I should be pushing for any of the other medications from this article if they just want to do more of what he's already had so far.

        [argh: hit some key combination which lost long message I'd typed; apologies if this re-write sounds frustrated]

        #HouseRabbit #antibiotic

        byronrabbit@mastodon.thirring.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
        byronrabbit@mastodon.thirring.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
        byronrabbit@mastodon.thirring.org
        wrote last edited by
        #6

        @cazabon Baytril, cipro and injectable penicillin are the only ones our buns have had over the years. Keep us posted on George. Hope this gets resolved.

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

          Rabbit folks...

          George started displaying symptoms of his upper respiratory infection coming back. The vet had previously said that he might live the rest of his life with a low-level infection, but I don't know if this counts as low-level, so I'm taking him back to the vet tomorrow, the soonest I could get him in.

          I'm wondering if any of you are particularly knowledgeable about antibiotics in our buns? I've always heard from vets that there were only "a couple" that were appropriate for rabbit use, but the House Rabbit Society - rabbit.org - has this article which lists a bunch more (it also includes a bunch you can't use). Anyone have any opinions on this?
          https://rabbit.org/health/appropriate-use-of-antibiotics-in-rabbits/

          George has already been through enrofloxacin ("Baytril") with steroids when he was at the Small Animal Clinic in Saskatoon last fall, and then oral ciprofloxacin ("Ciloxan") and injected penicillin from two more rounds from our vet here in town. Obviously getting a culture done to confirm what drug will affect it will be best, and I'll try for that, but I'm wondering whether I should be pushing for any of the other medications from this article if they just want to do more of what he's already had so far.

          [argh: hit some key combination which lost long message I'd typed; apologies if this re-write sounds frustrated]

          #HouseRabbit #antibiotic

          bunnymama@sfba.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
          bunnymama@sfba.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
          bunnymama@sfba.social
          wrote last edited by
          #7

          @cazabon

          Fingers and paws crossed for George. To be honest, I’m not good at remembering the names of bunny drugs. For any bad infections, we end up having to administer injectable penicillin. I have had trouble with my buns feeling nauseous when they’re on certain meds. And then the resulting hunger strike is so not good 😞

          🚑

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

            Rabbit folks...

            George started displaying symptoms of his upper respiratory infection coming back. The vet had previously said that he might live the rest of his life with a low-level infection, but I don't know if this counts as low-level, so I'm taking him back to the vet tomorrow, the soonest I could get him in.

            I'm wondering if any of you are particularly knowledgeable about antibiotics in our buns? I've always heard from vets that there were only "a couple" that were appropriate for rabbit use, but the House Rabbit Society - rabbit.org - has this article which lists a bunch more (it also includes a bunch you can't use). Anyone have any opinions on this?
            https://rabbit.org/health/appropriate-use-of-antibiotics-in-rabbits/

            George has already been through enrofloxacin ("Baytril") with steroids when he was at the Small Animal Clinic in Saskatoon last fall, and then oral ciprofloxacin ("Ciloxan") and injected penicillin from two more rounds from our vet here in town. Obviously getting a culture done to confirm what drug will affect it will be best, and I'll try for that, but I'm wondering whether I should be pushing for any of the other medications from this article if they just want to do more of what he's already had so far.

            [argh: hit some key combination which lost long message I'd typed; apologies if this re-write sounds frustrated]

            #HouseRabbit #antibiotic

            jtheseamstress@hcommons.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
            jtheseamstress@hcommons.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
            jtheseamstress@hcommons.social
            wrote last edited by
            #8

            @cazabon Did you find out what kind of bacteria you're dealing with? What does the vet say?

            Marigold received Baytril (Enrofloxacin) and Convenia (Cefovecin) injections for her various skin conditions and when she was healing from her severe pododermatitis, but Convenia is risky apparently, so please be cautious with that one. This (trustworthy!) German site has a list of meds too, maybe this is somewhat helpful (with a translation app hopefully also readable): https://kaninchenwiese.de/vet/medikamenten-dosierungs-empfehlungen/

            Sending nose-bumps and well-wishes to George! 🐰 🐰

            cazabon@mindly.socialC 1 Reply Last reply
            1
            0
            • B bria@nerdculture.de

              @cazabon

              Our rabbit get marbofloxacine after another antibiotic didn't work for his nasal infection, and it heal him.
              But as other comments point it, wait for the culture as every situation is different.

              We also find that it could be temperature dependent, and raising the "night" temperature of the house seems to help.

              cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
              cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
              cazabon@mindly.social
              wrote last edited by
              #9

              @bria

              Thanks - marbofloxacin is one of the ones I was specifically interested in and will talk to the vet about. I do want a culture done, but sometimes vets here don't want to do things the way you want.

              The temperature thing is interesting. I do have my house set to cool off quite a bit at night. Something new to investigate!

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • jtheseamstress@hcommons.socialJ jtheseamstress@hcommons.social

                @cazabon Did you find out what kind of bacteria you're dealing with? What does the vet say?

                Marigold received Baytril (Enrofloxacin) and Convenia (Cefovecin) injections for her various skin conditions and when she was healing from her severe pododermatitis, but Convenia is risky apparently, so please be cautious with that one. This (trustworthy!) German site has a list of meds too, maybe this is somewhat helpful (with a translation app hopefully also readable): https://kaninchenwiese.de/vet/medikamenten-dosierungs-empfehlungen/

                Sending nose-bumps and well-wishes to George! 🐰 🐰

                cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                cazabon@mindly.social
                wrote last edited by
                #10

                @jtheseamstress

                The vet hasn't done a culture (yet), but I'm trying to get her to order one.

                I'd never heard of cefovecin, but it seems to be mostly for skin infections. But thanks for the link to the German site - I'll definitely check that out.

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • R relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic
                  R relay@relay.publicsquare.global shared this topic
                • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

                  Rabbit folks...

                  George started displaying symptoms of his upper respiratory infection coming back. The vet had previously said that he might live the rest of his life with a low-level infection, but I don't know if this counts as low-level, so I'm taking him back to the vet tomorrow, the soonest I could get him in.

                  I'm wondering if any of you are particularly knowledgeable about antibiotics in our buns? I've always heard from vets that there were only "a couple" that were appropriate for rabbit use, but the House Rabbit Society - rabbit.org - has this article which lists a bunch more (it also includes a bunch you can't use). Anyone have any opinions on this?
                  https://rabbit.org/health/appropriate-use-of-antibiotics-in-rabbits/

                  George has already been through enrofloxacin ("Baytril") with steroids when he was at the Small Animal Clinic in Saskatoon last fall, and then oral ciprofloxacin ("Ciloxan") and injected penicillin from two more rounds from our vet here in town. Obviously getting a culture done to confirm what drug will affect it will be best, and I'll try for that, but I'm wondering whether I should be pushing for any of the other medications from this article if they just want to do more of what he's already had so far.

                  [argh: hit some key combination which lost long message I'd typed; apologies if this re-write sounds frustrated]

                  #HouseRabbit #antibiotic

                  ncrav@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                  ncrav@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                  ncrav@mas.to
                  wrote last edited by
                  #11

                  @cazabon oh hoping you get better soon George 😶 Lua's (and orcus) infections were treated with saline nebulisations with a tiny bit of an antiseptic (forgot the name) mixed into it in one case, so not much experience with this.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

                    Rabbit folks...

                    George started displaying symptoms of his upper respiratory infection coming back. The vet had previously said that he might live the rest of his life with a low-level infection, but I don't know if this counts as low-level, so I'm taking him back to the vet tomorrow, the soonest I could get him in.

                    I'm wondering if any of you are particularly knowledgeable about antibiotics in our buns? I've always heard from vets that there were only "a couple" that were appropriate for rabbit use, but the House Rabbit Society - rabbit.org - has this article which lists a bunch more (it also includes a bunch you can't use). Anyone have any opinions on this?
                    https://rabbit.org/health/appropriate-use-of-antibiotics-in-rabbits/

                    George has already been through enrofloxacin ("Baytril") with steroids when he was at the Small Animal Clinic in Saskatoon last fall, and then oral ciprofloxacin ("Ciloxan") and injected penicillin from two more rounds from our vet here in town. Obviously getting a culture done to confirm what drug will affect it will be best, and I'll try for that, but I'm wondering whether I should be pushing for any of the other medications from this article if they just want to do more of what he's already had so far.

                    [argh: hit some key combination which lost long message I'd typed; apologies if this re-write sounds frustrated]

                    #HouseRabbit #antibiotic

                    cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                    cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                    cazabon@mindly.social
                    wrote last edited by
                    #12

                    George saw the vet this morning. Well, I did too.

                    Mostly good news: it's still only in his "upper respiratory tract" aka a sinus infection, not in his lungs. So we're going with a different antibiotic (azithromycin) and antibiotic eye drops and meloxicam, and oh ya, a probiotic...

                    She's "looking into" what the lab can do with a culture. She wasn't sure if an applicable PCR test exists, or which drugs they can test against if they do get a sufficient culture grown. To do it right, they need a swab from all the way in the back of the sinus cavity, which means sedation, so she really doesn't want to do that without knowing exactly what we could get out of it. Sigh... I really wish I could just know exactly what he's got, even if I can't do anything about it.

                    Oh, and as a "can't hurt" measure, we're to try environment improvements - specifically air purifier and humidifier. My partner jokes that he's going to have better conditions than the humans do.

                    [heard in background: "You're going to be grabbing me and force-medicating me twice a day again?"]

                    keith@social.starkeith.netK satori@mastodon.thirring.orgS byronrabbit@mastodon.thirring.orgB bunnymama@sfba.socialB 4 Replies Last reply
                    0
                    • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

                      George saw the vet this morning. Well, I did too.

                      Mostly good news: it's still only in his "upper respiratory tract" aka a sinus infection, not in his lungs. So we're going with a different antibiotic (azithromycin) and antibiotic eye drops and meloxicam, and oh ya, a probiotic...

                      She's "looking into" what the lab can do with a culture. She wasn't sure if an applicable PCR test exists, or which drugs they can test against if they do get a sufficient culture grown. To do it right, they need a swab from all the way in the back of the sinus cavity, which means sedation, so she really doesn't want to do that without knowing exactly what we could get out of it. Sigh... I really wish I could just know exactly what he's got, even if I can't do anything about it.

                      Oh, and as a "can't hurt" measure, we're to try environment improvements - specifically air purifier and humidifier. My partner jokes that he's going to have better conditions than the humans do.

                      [heard in background: "You're going to be grabbing me and force-medicating me twice a day again?"]

                      keith@social.starkeith.netK This user is from outside of this forum
                      keith@social.starkeith.netK This user is from outside of this forum
                      keith@social.starkeith.net
                      wrote last edited by
                      #13

                      @cazabon Poor George... hope you can figure out what's going on with him and get him the right treatment ASAP - we went through a lot of that with Matilda and it was no fun for anyone.

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                      • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

                        George saw the vet this morning. Well, I did too.

                        Mostly good news: it's still only in his "upper respiratory tract" aka a sinus infection, not in his lungs. So we're going with a different antibiotic (azithromycin) and antibiotic eye drops and meloxicam, and oh ya, a probiotic...

                        She's "looking into" what the lab can do with a culture. She wasn't sure if an applicable PCR test exists, or which drugs they can test against if they do get a sufficient culture grown. To do it right, they need a swab from all the way in the back of the sinus cavity, which means sedation, so she really doesn't want to do that without knowing exactly what we could get out of it. Sigh... I really wish I could just know exactly what he's got, even if I can't do anything about it.

                        Oh, and as a "can't hurt" measure, we're to try environment improvements - specifically air purifier and humidifier. My partner jokes that he's going to have better conditions than the humans do.

                        [heard in background: "You're going to be grabbing me and force-medicating me twice a day again?"]

                        satori@mastodon.thirring.orgS This user is from outside of this forum
                        satori@mastodon.thirring.orgS This user is from outside of this forum
                        satori@mastodon.thirring.org
                        wrote last edited by
                        #14

                        @cazabon Good news that it’s higher up in his respiratory tract. Ugh too bad about the treatment, though. Assume tobradoz for the eyes? We’ve been on that a million times here. It likes to ball up with surface tension and roll..😖

                        Probiotics can be tasty! Our buns would do anything for a bit of the benebac gel we have. Hmm, Skye has a humidifier, too 😂…

                        cazabon@mindly.socialC 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

                          George saw the vet this morning. Well, I did too.

                          Mostly good news: it's still only in his "upper respiratory tract" aka a sinus infection, not in his lungs. So we're going with a different antibiotic (azithromycin) and antibiotic eye drops and meloxicam, and oh ya, a probiotic...

                          She's "looking into" what the lab can do with a culture. She wasn't sure if an applicable PCR test exists, or which drugs they can test against if they do get a sufficient culture grown. To do it right, they need a swab from all the way in the back of the sinus cavity, which means sedation, so she really doesn't want to do that without knowing exactly what we could get out of it. Sigh... I really wish I could just know exactly what he's got, even if I can't do anything about it.

                          Oh, and as a "can't hurt" measure, we're to try environment improvements - specifically air purifier and humidifier. My partner jokes that he's going to have better conditions than the humans do.

                          [heard in background: "You're going to be grabbing me and force-medicating me twice a day again?"]

                          byronrabbit@mastodon.thirring.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
                          byronrabbit@mastodon.thirring.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
                          byronrabbit@mastodon.thirring.org
                          wrote last edited by
                          #15

                          @cazabon Poor George. Really hope the new meds and humidifier help.
                          What kind of flooring is George on most of the time? If it's carpet, is it possible the infection is coming from that? Bunnies are right at ground level and even the cleanest carpets have dust mites, bacteria, etc. Just a wild thought.

                          1 Reply Last reply
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                          • cazabon@mindly.socialC cazabon@mindly.social

                            George saw the vet this morning. Well, I did too.

                            Mostly good news: it's still only in his "upper respiratory tract" aka a sinus infection, not in his lungs. So we're going with a different antibiotic (azithromycin) and antibiotic eye drops and meloxicam, and oh ya, a probiotic...

                            She's "looking into" what the lab can do with a culture. She wasn't sure if an applicable PCR test exists, or which drugs they can test against if they do get a sufficient culture grown. To do it right, they need a swab from all the way in the back of the sinus cavity, which means sedation, so she really doesn't want to do that without knowing exactly what we could get out of it. Sigh... I really wish I could just know exactly what he's got, even if I can't do anything about it.

                            Oh, and as a "can't hurt" measure, we're to try environment improvements - specifically air purifier and humidifier. My partner jokes that he's going to have better conditions than the humans do.

                            [heard in background: "You're going to be grabbing me and force-medicating me twice a day again?"]

                            bunnymama@sfba.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
                            bunnymama@sfba.socialB This user is from outside of this forum
                            bunnymama@sfba.social
                            wrote last edited by
                            #16

                            @cazabon

                            Feel better soon, George. BunDad and I both have asthma, so we use super-duper air filters for the house HVAC. I don’t know if that would work for you and your partner and George. He deserves the best. 🌷

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • satori@mastodon.thirring.orgS satori@mastodon.thirring.org

                              @cazabon Good news that it’s higher up in his respiratory tract. Ugh too bad about the treatment, though. Assume tobradoz for the eyes? We’ve been on that a million times here. It likes to ball up with surface tension and roll..😖

                              Probiotics can be tasty! Our buns would do anything for a bit of the benebac gel we have. Hmm, Skye has a humidifier, too 😂…

                              cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                              cazabon@mindly.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                              cazabon@mindly.social
                              wrote last edited by
                              #17

                              @Satori

                              It's not tobramycin or tobradex (which is tobramycin with dexamethasone, is that different from tobradoz?). The vet has annoying put the great big labels right over the branding information, but this eye gel is chloramphenicol.

                              The probiotic is the one you mentioned - a yellow gel? Good to hear it's not nasty, maybe he'll take it nicely then.

                              The NSA is gonna think this group is an illegal underground pharmaceutical company or something.

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