One of the primary ingredients in Critical Care (for herbivores) is Timothy Hay to help promote gut health in a rabbit that stops eating all together. Not all rabbit owners are going to have the kind of access to turn the rabbit's pellets into a mixture to force feed their ill rabbit. Nor would they have the time to do it. Critical Care is already in powdered form and ready to be mixed. No. Oxbow is not advertising anything on here. It is simply a recommendation by my vet to have on hand at all times because of things like when Rexy went into stasis. I don't have the means, or space, to turn their pellets into a puree mixture and force feed them. Especially since their pellets are only given in small amounts and I have no means of turning their actual hay into dust to make a homemade critical care. Please note, none of this would matter if Rexy had suffered from bloating instead of stasis. I was merely asking for other alternative ways of getting him to take the Critical Care since I know he's going to put up a lot of resistance if we are forced to do it again. We got lucky this round that he chose to continue to eat after surgery, but there will be times where he will stop and we have to be prepared in a pinch.
Now back on to the subject of this thread:
In one of the rabbit groups I'm in on Facebook, someone suggested using the premade pumpkin puree you would buy from the store for pumpkin pie. They were using it for their senior rabbit and it worked for them. We chose to use an actual pie pumpkin instead of the premade pumpkin because of the chances of there being an ingredient our rabbits cannot have being in the premade. Also wanted to know because, for some reason, the stuff gets stuck in the feeding syringe. I know my vet suggested the digestive health cookies, but that's more for testing if he will eat it, rather than getting him to eat it if he stops eating. I saw a couple people on this post suggest using a type of slippery surface so he wouldn't have a good enough grip to resist. The only slippery enough surface to do that is our bathtub and doing that would put more stress on the poor little dude than what would put him into stasis. Not only that, Rexy knows how to move on a slippery surface, better than the others, so it'd be a real struggle for us, then. I know bunny burrito works, kind of, but the problem becomes when they move their head back, literal jerking it back when attempting critical care feeding.
Since Rexy did choose to eat rather than let the stress of his surgery stop him from eating, this is, now, more for the future. Just in case. Because, as we all should know, stasis can happen at any time.