I just found this in the tray of a young doe. Of course one of my favorites. She's just under 4 months old. There is plenty of normal poop and urine with it. However she seemed a little subdued yesterday evenung. She's always been a very passive bunny when being petted or handled, but seemed a little hunched this afternoon when I cleaned. She got water into her food bowl and her pellets were wet so she didn't eat them. They all always have plenty of timothy hay and timothy - alfalfa horse cubes for their teeth and entertainment. I have not given her fresh pellets yet in case of gastric distress, I wanted her to try to nibble some hay instead. She did just eat an offered baby green with gusto, and seemed to be looking for her pellet bowl, has been a little more active.
I have baby formula gas treatment and critical care available.
Thoughts please? Thank you for any input!
That looks like evidence of the beginning of mucoid enteritis. As it progresses, there'll be more mucous and it'll start to enclose the poops, then eventually replace them all together. The rabbit's belly will get distended, and as she gets more uncomfortable she'll sit in a pretty distinct hunched posture and grind her teeth. Bunnies suffering from this do tend to keep drinking, sometimes to excess; if they have a bowl, they'll often sit with their front feet in the water.
I'd take her off pellets and give her only hay and Critical Care right away. Benebac or any other herbivore probiotic gel is also very helpful. In a pinch I've given mini rex with mucoid enteritis plain yogurt, but while some will eat it, others won't. Adding some NutriDrops for Rabbits to water or Critical Care also gives them a bump, if they've been off feed for long. If the simethicone seems to be helping her, that's okay too.
If you can get hold of Neomycin Oral (last year it became prescription-only
) that is usually very helpful. If you can't get that, you can buy Dry-Tail for hamsters, which is the same drug, it's just tricky to figure out the dosing for a bigger rabbit. (It's not particularly likely you'll have any problems with overdose, but still you want dosage to be more-or-less on the mark.)
One thing we've found is that frequently the more attention these bunnies get (holding,petting, etc.), the better they tend to recover. One especially bad case would only eat and drink when we held and petted him.