I have an 8 year old rabbit with head tilt that began about a week ago. I would like input as to when I should ask to have the treatment regiment changed.
A few hours into the start, the rabbit got emergency care and was given Baytril, high-dose Panacur, cesapride, meloxicam, and Bonine. I have not been using the meloxicam, and have added VSL#3.
In the past 2 days (after 7 days of being on the medication), the dizziness has gotten worse and the head has become more turned. At no point in time has the rabbit stopped eating hay, pellets, vegetables, and is still consuming water, making normal poop output, and consuming cecetropes. If I am going to change the regiment, now is the time given we all know what the prognosis can spiral to when a rabbit stops the above.
I know that both the protozoa and (multiple suspected) bacteria causes of head tilt take a period of time to respond to treatment, but my concern is that after 9 days of treatment than worsening balance indicates that one or both causes are still advancing the attack, and it is probably on her spine. I am also aware of concern of developing quinolone resistance to one of the strains of bacteria that has been noted as having some degree of relationship with head tilt.
MY ASSUMPTION ON CAUSATION
It appears some parties feel that certain strains of bacteria are the cause, where others feel it is the secondary infection, and multiple different strains have been associated with head tilt. I have to work off of the assumption that my rabbit has both a serious protozoa (e. cuniculi) and an serious and unknown bacterial infection, simultaneously.
FOR THE BACTERIA
My rabbit has never had an ear infection and her ears are clear...so I presume if this is indeed bacterial, it is somewhere between deep within her inner ears to her brain...either way, a biopsy and susceptibility testing are limited, if not useless. If I am going to change the antibiotic, it needs to be something that will rapidly kill as many of the possible bacterial as possible given multiple rounds of antibiotics (with people and rabbits alike) can easily end up badly.
In place of the enrofloxicin, I am thinking doxycycline because of how it rapidly crosses the blood-brain barrier, it's tendency to be pH resistant, how it is considered an antibiotic of choice to treat CNS infections and cross the blood-brain barrier when there is inflammation (even in its oral form), its widespectrum activity, and its limited anti-protozoal effects. Could doxycycline's limited anti-protozoal affect act as a potentiator to other anti-protozoa medications or make the body less hospitable to the parasite's ability to survive?
I am also very interested in a specific antibiotic, cefepime. Has it been used (obviously IM/IV) in rabbits and is there any outcome data?
FOR THE PROTOZOA
I am still reading on differences of thought with a high-dose Pancur versus a cocktail of panacur plus several other medications used with it. I am not having luck finding efficacy data regarding e. cuniculi in specific. It seems some Vets like to combine it with Ponazuril. Is there any data suggesting the outcomes of the different management?
I am also starting to read about albendazole and fumagillin.
Do you think it is time to change the regiment?
If so, would you change the antibiotic, the antiparasitic, the gut motility agent, none, or all?
Thanks much
A few hours into the start, the rabbit got emergency care and was given Baytril, high-dose Panacur, cesapride, meloxicam, and Bonine. I have not been using the meloxicam, and have added VSL#3.
In the past 2 days (after 7 days of being on the medication), the dizziness has gotten worse and the head has become more turned. At no point in time has the rabbit stopped eating hay, pellets, vegetables, and is still consuming water, making normal poop output, and consuming cecetropes. If I am going to change the regiment, now is the time given we all know what the prognosis can spiral to when a rabbit stops the above.
I know that both the protozoa and (multiple suspected) bacteria causes of head tilt take a period of time to respond to treatment, but my concern is that after 9 days of treatment than worsening balance indicates that one or both causes are still advancing the attack, and it is probably on her spine. I am also aware of concern of developing quinolone resistance to one of the strains of bacteria that has been noted as having some degree of relationship with head tilt.
MY ASSUMPTION ON CAUSATION
It appears some parties feel that certain strains of bacteria are the cause, where others feel it is the secondary infection, and multiple different strains have been associated with head tilt. I have to work off of the assumption that my rabbit has both a serious protozoa (e. cuniculi) and an serious and unknown bacterial infection, simultaneously.
FOR THE BACTERIA
My rabbit has never had an ear infection and her ears are clear...so I presume if this is indeed bacterial, it is somewhere between deep within her inner ears to her brain...either way, a biopsy and susceptibility testing are limited, if not useless. If I am going to change the antibiotic, it needs to be something that will rapidly kill as many of the possible bacterial as possible given multiple rounds of antibiotics (with people and rabbits alike) can easily end up badly.
In place of the enrofloxicin, I am thinking doxycycline because of how it rapidly crosses the blood-brain barrier, it's tendency to be pH resistant, how it is considered an antibiotic of choice to treat CNS infections and cross the blood-brain barrier when there is inflammation (even in its oral form), its widespectrum activity, and its limited anti-protozoal effects. Could doxycycline's limited anti-protozoal affect act as a potentiator to other anti-protozoa medications or make the body less hospitable to the parasite's ability to survive?
I am also very interested in a specific antibiotic, cefepime. Has it been used (obviously IM/IV) in rabbits and is there any outcome data?
FOR THE PROTOZOA
I am still reading on differences of thought with a high-dose Pancur versus a cocktail of panacur plus several other medications used with it. I am not having luck finding efficacy data regarding e. cuniculi in specific. It seems some Vets like to combine it with Ponazuril. Is there any data suggesting the outcomes of the different management?
I am also starting to read about albendazole and fumagillin.
Do you think it is time to change the regiment?
If so, would you change the antibiotic, the antiparasitic, the gut motility agent, none, or all?
Thanks much