CASE 1.
Male Rabbit, 6 years old.
Molar spurs and a big limb
abscess similar to Case 2.
A 6-year-old rabbit had
not eating for 3-4 days
and had salivation. The
owner knew it was due to
his sharp molar teeth. "3
vets advised euthanasia,"
she had found the 4th vet
who solved her problem by
filing the rabbit's molars
under anaesthesia. This
must be done every few
weeks.
However this 4th
vet worked certain days
and was unavailable. I was
available on Sunday and so
she consulted me. Now, the
4th vet had her full
confidence and if the
rabbit passed away under
anaesthesia, she would
have no suspicion about
his competence. I was a
first-time vet. I advised
her to consult the 4th vet
on Monday even if she had
to take leave to see him
as I or no vet could
guarantee no death during
anaesthesia to file the
molars. She accepted my
advice.
This rabbit had a very big
lump, similar in size to
CASE 2. The 4th vet
drained the abscess and
gave her a white cream to
rub onto it. So she did it
and over time, it became
bigger and bigger. "Can
surgery be done?" I
wondered. "Is it too late
now as the lump is so big,
around 2cm x 1.5cm", I
explained to her that
there would be a big hole.
Should surgery be done in
the first instance when
the abscess was small
instead of lancing it and
draining it?
This is hard
to say as the standard
practice for an abscess is
to incise and drain the
pus. This had been
done at the first visit.
However, Vet 4 had
prescribed a cream to
apply and the owner had
been using this cream for
a long time.
I don't give cream
after drainage but each
vet has his own
preferences. The owner has
to see the vet if the
abscess recur instead of
applying cream and seeing
it swell to a bigger size
over time. Seek a second
opinion.
Now that this
rabbit has become older
and weaker due to loss of
appetite attributed to
molar spur formation, the
anaesthetic risks have had
doubled.
This growing
abscess could have
weakened the rabbit and
made it high risk
anaesthetic patient based
on the application of a
"white cream". This cream
relieved itchiness in the
rabbit and I presumed it
must be a potent
corticosteroid.
If the owner had consulted
the vet again when the
abscess recurred and the
vet had drained the
abscess, the rabbit might
not be having such a large
limb abscess now.
Of course, it would cost
money to see the vet
again.
It is very difficult to remove
an abscess
intact with its capsule
and some rabbit abscess do recur.
But many rabbit owners
seem to give up consulting
the vet.
Applying
cream would not make any
big abscesses
disappear. In this case,
the owner showed me a
small plastic container
with white cream given by
Vet 4. There was no name
of the cream and so I
would presume that it was
a corticosteroid as it
would relieve the
itchiness in the limb.
However, it did not
help the rabbit in the
long term.
Other than the age of 6
years and a loss of
appetite for a few days,
the other factor to
consider is the long-term
use of corticosteroid.
This may suppress the
immune system and thereby
weakening the rabbit. If I
took on this new client
and anaesthesized her
rabbit for the treatment
of molar spurs, the rabbit
may just die on the
operating table. A death
on the operating table is
unforgivable by many
owners and their family
members if you read the
rabbit internet forum.
The only possible
conclusion this owner and
her family members would
make would be that I
killed the rabbit due to
poor judgment or
incompetence.
It would be very highly
emotional and sometimes
the owner would bad-mouth
to all friends to avoid
the practice.
No excuses or reasons
would be acceptable to the
owner and her family
members when there is a
death of a pet at the vet.
Therefore I advised and
the owner accepted that
her usual vet would handle
her case on Monday.
It would appear that I was
not confident enough to
treat her rabbit. I did
not have a good feeling in
this case and it would be
best to lose a client and
have a live rabbit for the
owner. Vets are not
Gods.
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CASE 2.
Male Rabbit, 10 years old.
Big limb abscess similar to Case 1.
Two days after seeing Case
1, a
10-year-old thin rabbit
came to challenge me as to
how I should handle a
similar case.
An almost
identical case with the
abscess equally as large
but at the starting stage.
No anti-inflammatory cream had been applied.
I had seen this rabbit for
nail clipping some 6 years
ago and the young boy is
now a grown up man. His
silver-haired father said,
"My son is upset that his
rabbit has this large
swelling in the right hind
leg."
This rabbit is ancient and
towards the end of his
life span! "He had not
been eating for 2 days,"
the mum said. Well, when
the parents said 2 days of
anorexia, it could be more
than 2 days of inappetance
or loss of appetite. So,
here I have. A more high
risk anaesthetic case. I
gave him less than 30%
chances of survival under
anaesthesia and prolonged
surgery. There was no
point incising the abscess
and draining out as much
of the pus as possible.
This rabbit would not have
a second chance at surgery
as he is so old. I decide
to try and get the capsule
of the abscesses shelled
out but this is easier
said than done. On closer
inspection, he had 2
abscesses. The medial one
appeared encapsulated. The
lateral one was soft and
both were connected to
give the impression they
were one large swelling.
So, one cut to drain both
would not be satisfactory.
The abscess would recur.
"Telephone your son to let
him know this is high risk
and he may not see his
rabbit alive today if
anaesthesia is done." The
father phoned but there
was no response. "Go
ahead. Do your best." he
said. He knew the odds. He
was the father who took
time off to get the
rabbit's nails clipped
some 6 years ago and there
was no medical problems
till now.
To shorten the story, here
is what I did.
1. Dextrose saline 20 ml
with baytril antibiotics.
It was not possible to
give an IV drip in small
rabbits.
2. Ear vein. 0.1 ml
Domitor. Isoflurane gas
mask to maintain when the
rabbit needed anaesthesia
e.g. squealing or moving a
bit.
3. Incision as long as
possible to get all pus
out. I could not see the
capsule in the medial side
but much of the debris and
capsule were scrapped off.
The lateral side had soft
cheesy pus. "Why is the
pus so thick," Alice, a
4th year Murdoch vet
student asked me. Dog
abscesses are usually
watery and she was asking
a pertinent question. I
wanted my vet assistant to
answer but they might not
know and so I saved them
the embarrassment.
Fortunately I had an
answer. "Rabbits do not
have an enzyme to liquefy
the pus, unlike dogs," I
hope this answer would
satisfy her. Having vet
interns can be quite
problematic or challenging
if one has no answers? So
some vets don't want
interns.
4. Surgery. 2 incisions at
the side. Large enough to
view and scrap off
infected capsule if
possible. Normal saline
flushed out all debris. 5/0
nylon sutures, simple
interrupted.
5. Trimethoprim and
meloxicalm oral for 14
days. Rabbit goes home
after 2 days. Stitch
removal in Day 14.
Will abscess recur? Follow
up by the owner is
essential. The rabbit was
caged since the past year
as the owner shifted to a
much smaller apartment. He
was permitted out but
would not dare to come out
as his cage was in the
balcony. "He may be afraid
of being preyed upon by
birds or the smell of
breeze," I explain as this
rabbit was active and was
roaming the room in the
old residence for the past
9 years. "Why not permit
him in the living area?"
How he got this big
abscess, I don't know. I
hope he recover fully and
will not need any surgery.
He may live past 10 years
as he is well cared for.
This is a very long-lived
rabbit in Singapore. If he
was not caged, he might
not have this abscess. But
who knows?
4 days after the surgery, I
phoned the owners as we had
a relationship of trust. "I
leave it to my husband and
son to nurse the rabbit,"
the wife answered the phone
as the husband was driving.
The husband phoned me later
and said: "No biting of
stitches. The rabbit is
eating normal and receiving
his medication. Does he need
stitch removal?"
"Yes," I said. "The rabbit
was stitched up with 5/0
nylon sutures which would
not dissolved. Bring the
rabbit in 14 days after his
surgery for stitch removal."
This old rabbit hides behind
the sofa set when released
in the living room or will
just stay inside the cage
when placed in the balcony.
Before the shifting to a new
apartment one year ago, this
rabbit was sociable and
running around inside the
apartment. What causes
this change in behaviour is
hard to say.
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