Cyber-Wizard
Well-Known Member
Cleo, my 3yr old sweetheart ofa lop took ill recently. Looks like her first bout with G.I. Stasis. She's generally a healthy indoor bun who loves to run around the house and play. Wifey finally agreed to move her one plant outside for the summer several weeks ago so we no longer have to move it up out of reach before opening the cage door for bunny launch.
On Monday and Tuesday I found thick paste like poop on her cage shelves but no other symptoms. She had had carrots 3 meals ina row so I chalked it up to an overdose as she generally only gets carrots/parsnips once or twicea week. On Wednesday everything seemed back to normal. No poop issues, eating fine, etc. Thursday morning she was laying very still beside her litterbox. Litter hadn't been used since the previous evening, but her bowl of greens was almost completely empty. Generally her hay and pellets get changed twicea day and she gets a cup and a half to two cups of greens morning and night. I called the vet and they couldn't see her until Thursday evening so I worked from home on Thursday and kept an eye on her. Around 3:00 she started accepting eyedroppers of water after having done nothing but move slightly all day. Once I got about 1/4 cup of water in her she suddenly came out of her house and started to groom. I managed to get her to the vet and they found her temperature to be 3.5 degrees lower than normal so they incubated her and kept her overnight.
I picked her up after work on Friday evening and brought her back home. She spent most of the evening racing around the house "touching" all of her stuff to make sure we hadn't done anything to her house while she was gone. The vet sent us home with Metacam, Metoclopramide, and Cisapride with instructions to force feed her Critical Care at mealtimes. The vet has nicknamed her "Boxer" for the amount of difficulty that they had in capturing her for fluid injections and forcefeeding. All of the vets staff got savagely paw-slapped throughout her stay. She has never cared for being handled in any manner other than petting and is incredibly difficult to grab a hold of. Where we're at now is that we can't get any food into her. She's disinterested in hay and pellets and we can't hang onto her well enough to give her a syringe. Right now she seems happy running around the house and is pooping just fine in her litterbox. She had one bout of runny poop overnight but all has been fine since then. She's eaten a few pieces of hay on her own throughout the morning but hasn't eaten much at all. Right now Wifey is sitting on the floor in front of her cage carefully selecting softer grasses from her hay and hand feeding them to her. She's more than happy to take very specific pieces of hay as long as they are offered one at a time. She accepted quite a lot of hay in this manner but it takes a looong time.
Sorry this is such a long story, I'm pretty worried...
The vet said we should cut out her greens for a few days to see that she gets better. I had to mash up her meds in a bit of banana as we couldn't hang on to her well enough for a syringe and she all but attacked me to get at that banana. When I offered her a couple of inches of carrot tops to see if she was actually as hungry as she seemed, sheclimbed all over me to get at them. I gave her only a small bit and she spent the next 20 minutes standing up on her hindlegs at the table where I put the remainder. She has been going back into her cage all morning looking for the dish of greens that is usually put there at breakfast time (and is a little put out that it's not there)She's definitely hungry, but doesn't really seem to want what the vet says she should have.
Can anyone offer me tips for getting Critical Care into her? I've tried mixing it with banana or a small amount of carrot greens but she just picks out the greens and runs away. I've tried catching her in my hands and with a towel but now she won't let me near her(very uncommon as she's really very attached to me). I've tried smearing it on her paws or nose but now she's caught on to that as well. I'm not sure how best to care for her since she's so difficult. As long as she's well we've never had to pick her up. She loved being handled right up until she was spayed and from then on it's been petting only. I've read many, many forums but it seems the only answer has been to catch her and forcefeed her. I can't imagine that she's that difficult to deal with but it seems that she's much smarter and more wiley than I am.:blushan:
On Monday and Tuesday I found thick paste like poop on her cage shelves but no other symptoms. She had had carrots 3 meals ina row so I chalked it up to an overdose as she generally only gets carrots/parsnips once or twicea week. On Wednesday everything seemed back to normal. No poop issues, eating fine, etc. Thursday morning she was laying very still beside her litterbox. Litter hadn't been used since the previous evening, but her bowl of greens was almost completely empty. Generally her hay and pellets get changed twicea day and she gets a cup and a half to two cups of greens morning and night. I called the vet and they couldn't see her until Thursday evening so I worked from home on Thursday and kept an eye on her. Around 3:00 she started accepting eyedroppers of water after having done nothing but move slightly all day. Once I got about 1/4 cup of water in her she suddenly came out of her house and started to groom. I managed to get her to the vet and they found her temperature to be 3.5 degrees lower than normal so they incubated her and kept her overnight.
I picked her up after work on Friday evening and brought her back home. She spent most of the evening racing around the house "touching" all of her stuff to make sure we hadn't done anything to her house while she was gone. The vet sent us home with Metacam, Metoclopramide, and Cisapride with instructions to force feed her Critical Care at mealtimes. The vet has nicknamed her "Boxer" for the amount of difficulty that they had in capturing her for fluid injections and forcefeeding. All of the vets staff got savagely paw-slapped throughout her stay. She has never cared for being handled in any manner other than petting and is incredibly difficult to grab a hold of. Where we're at now is that we can't get any food into her. She's disinterested in hay and pellets and we can't hang onto her well enough to give her a syringe. Right now she seems happy running around the house and is pooping just fine in her litterbox. She had one bout of runny poop overnight but all has been fine since then. She's eaten a few pieces of hay on her own throughout the morning but hasn't eaten much at all. Right now Wifey is sitting on the floor in front of her cage carefully selecting softer grasses from her hay and hand feeding them to her. She's more than happy to take very specific pieces of hay as long as they are offered one at a time. She accepted quite a lot of hay in this manner but it takes a looong time.
Sorry this is such a long story, I'm pretty worried...
The vet said we should cut out her greens for a few days to see that she gets better. I had to mash up her meds in a bit of banana as we couldn't hang on to her well enough for a syringe and she all but attacked me to get at that banana. When I offered her a couple of inches of carrot tops to see if she was actually as hungry as she seemed, sheclimbed all over me to get at them. I gave her only a small bit and she spent the next 20 minutes standing up on her hindlegs at the table where I put the remainder. She has been going back into her cage all morning looking for the dish of greens that is usually put there at breakfast time (and is a little put out that it's not there)She's definitely hungry, but doesn't really seem to want what the vet says she should have.
Can anyone offer me tips for getting Critical Care into her? I've tried mixing it with banana or a small amount of carrot greens but she just picks out the greens and runs away. I've tried catching her in my hands and with a towel but now she won't let me near her(very uncommon as she's really very attached to me). I've tried smearing it on her paws or nose but now she's caught on to that as well. I'm not sure how best to care for her since she's so difficult. As long as she's well we've never had to pick her up. She loved being handled right up until she was spayed and from then on it's been petting only. I've read many, many forums but it seems the only answer has been to catch her and forcefeed her. I can't imagine that she's that difficult to deal with but it seems that she's much smarter and more wiley than I am.:blushan: