Hello everyone.
New to the forum, definitely could use some help.
First of all pardon me if something doesn’t make sense, I am not a native English speaker so I’m trying to translate as best as I can.
Me and my girlfriend decided to get a bunny about 1,5 years ago, so she must be around 2 years old now. Neutered about a year ago. She’s probably a crossbreed of Lionhead and Holland Lop (at least I recognize these characteristics, maybe I’m wrong).
45 days ago she had a GI stasis (or something close to that). One morning she was hunched, slow breathing, hardly moving. We took her to a new vet, thankfully specialized at bunnies (our previous vet apparently wasn’t), and got diagnosed with GI stasis. Probably caused by hairballs since she is extremely furry and our previous vet never gave us directions about grooming her, or occasionally giving her paste for hairballs. She was given injections with meds and fluids to hydrate as far as I know. We took her home, and followed exactly the directions from the vet, we gave her the meds and all.
She improved a lot. Gradually, her belly became softer, she was pooping, she was eating more eagerly with the syringe and by herself, and everything seemed to be getting back to normal. We visited the vet, said her clinical image was really improved, so we stopped the meds and for 5-6 days everything seemed to be ok.
But then she started not eating very eagerly. She wasn’t finishing her pellets (which she loved to eat) and she was hardly eating hay at all (she was never a huge fan of hay no matter how many different brands and types we tried, but it wasn’t that bad). She wasn’t drinking a lot of water either.
We took her to the vet again, and she gave us 2 options. The first option was to check her teeth to see if there was an issue there that caused her not eating properly, and the second option was blood tests and an ultrasound to see if the GI stasis was cured. In order to check her teeth, she had to be sedated and we were scared to do that so we chose the second option.
Both the blood test and the ultrasound showed that there was still some inflammation in her intestines so we started the medication again. It showed some improvement but not much. She is still not drinking enough water, still not going crazy about her pellets like she did in the past and is nibbling on some hay every now and then. But when my girlfriend approaches her with the syringe to feed her, 9/10 times she’s eating like crazy. And her poop is full of hair (even though we groom her every day and we give her the paste for the hairballs and the paraffin oil the vet told us).
However her image is not bad. She is quite active, running around, doing her binkies and showing she is happy, and her weight is quite steady (around 2 kilos as it was when she was perfectly healthy) and her belly is quite soft. She doesn’t seem 100% like she was before all that, but I would say she is around 80%.
But the facts remain: she is drinking very little water, not eating hay, not being really eager to finish her pellets, and she is mainly interested in the emeraid sustain we feed her with the syringe.
And we are totally confused by what’s going on.
In our minds there are 3 scenarios
1. All of this is a remnant of the GI stasis, that will gradually go away, and there is nothing to worry about. We just keep on doing what we are doing and one morning she will start drinking her water, eating her hay and pellets and our life will go back to normal.
2. She has issues with her teeth and that’s why she’s not really interested in hard foods like pellets and hay but devours the emeraid from the syringe which is a soft paste like food and does not cause pain by chewing. However this scenario does not explain why she is not drinking water.
3. She has become spoiled because all this time that this thing is going on we are all over her, feeding her, grooming her, giving her all the attention possible, and that’s why she prefers to eat with the syringe due to the interaction with us, rather than eating her pellets and hay by herself. This scenario though does not explain the water issue either.
We have tried to stop the syringe feeding for some days to see if she will eat more eagerly by herself, but nothing changed so we started the syringe feeding again.
Is it possible that the symptoms from the GI stasis still have not totally gone away after 45 days, so it’s a matter of time and patience and everything will go back to normal? Is it usual for a GI stasis to last that long?
Should we go check her teeth and take the risk of the sedation?
Any help/ideas would be greatly appreciated because we are losing our minds.
PS. Sorry for the very long text but I thought I should include all the details possible to help you understand the situation.
New to the forum, definitely could use some help.
First of all pardon me if something doesn’t make sense, I am not a native English speaker so I’m trying to translate as best as I can.
Me and my girlfriend decided to get a bunny about 1,5 years ago, so she must be around 2 years old now. Neutered about a year ago. She’s probably a crossbreed of Lionhead and Holland Lop (at least I recognize these characteristics, maybe I’m wrong).
45 days ago she had a GI stasis (or something close to that). One morning she was hunched, slow breathing, hardly moving. We took her to a new vet, thankfully specialized at bunnies (our previous vet apparently wasn’t), and got diagnosed with GI stasis. Probably caused by hairballs since she is extremely furry and our previous vet never gave us directions about grooming her, or occasionally giving her paste for hairballs. She was given injections with meds and fluids to hydrate as far as I know. We took her home, and followed exactly the directions from the vet, we gave her the meds and all.
She improved a lot. Gradually, her belly became softer, she was pooping, she was eating more eagerly with the syringe and by herself, and everything seemed to be getting back to normal. We visited the vet, said her clinical image was really improved, so we stopped the meds and for 5-6 days everything seemed to be ok.
But then she started not eating very eagerly. She wasn’t finishing her pellets (which she loved to eat) and she was hardly eating hay at all (she was never a huge fan of hay no matter how many different brands and types we tried, but it wasn’t that bad). She wasn’t drinking a lot of water either.
We took her to the vet again, and she gave us 2 options. The first option was to check her teeth to see if there was an issue there that caused her not eating properly, and the second option was blood tests and an ultrasound to see if the GI stasis was cured. In order to check her teeth, she had to be sedated and we were scared to do that so we chose the second option.
Both the blood test and the ultrasound showed that there was still some inflammation in her intestines so we started the medication again. It showed some improvement but not much. She is still not drinking enough water, still not going crazy about her pellets like she did in the past and is nibbling on some hay every now and then. But when my girlfriend approaches her with the syringe to feed her, 9/10 times she’s eating like crazy. And her poop is full of hair (even though we groom her every day and we give her the paste for the hairballs and the paraffin oil the vet told us).
However her image is not bad. She is quite active, running around, doing her binkies and showing she is happy, and her weight is quite steady (around 2 kilos as it was when she was perfectly healthy) and her belly is quite soft. She doesn’t seem 100% like she was before all that, but I would say she is around 80%.
But the facts remain: she is drinking very little water, not eating hay, not being really eager to finish her pellets, and she is mainly interested in the emeraid sustain we feed her with the syringe.
And we are totally confused by what’s going on.
In our minds there are 3 scenarios
1. All of this is a remnant of the GI stasis, that will gradually go away, and there is nothing to worry about. We just keep on doing what we are doing and one morning she will start drinking her water, eating her hay and pellets and our life will go back to normal.
2. She has issues with her teeth and that’s why she’s not really interested in hard foods like pellets and hay but devours the emeraid from the syringe which is a soft paste like food and does not cause pain by chewing. However this scenario does not explain why she is not drinking water.
3. She has become spoiled because all this time that this thing is going on we are all over her, feeding her, grooming her, giving her all the attention possible, and that’s why she prefers to eat with the syringe due to the interaction with us, rather than eating her pellets and hay by herself. This scenario though does not explain the water issue either.
We have tried to stop the syringe feeding for some days to see if she will eat more eagerly by herself, but nothing changed so we started the syringe feeding again.
Is it possible that the symptoms from the GI stasis still have not totally gone away after 45 days, so it’s a matter of time and patience and everything will go back to normal? Is it usual for a GI stasis to last that long?
Should we go check her teeth and take the risk of the sedation?
Any help/ideas would be greatly appreciated because we are losing our minds.
PS. Sorry for the very long text but I thought I should include all the details possible to help you understand the situation.