Pics soon, just waiting for camera to charge
VERY urgent. Yesterday I bred all of my does for April kits, the buck did very well but refused to touch my thicker-furred grey doe. I went about breeding my other does and checked her later thinking she might really be a buck and the sellers were mistaken.
I flip her over, a bit underweight thats for sure, (mental increase of food, maybe temporary separation). Next thing I notice are the beginnings of a very nasty case of sore hocks. Alright. Treatable, I can handle that. Fur is a bit stained and tangled, but with her hocks the way they are I'm not too surprised.
After I check her to see if she's really a doe. Yes she is, but the skin and fur around her gentilia is odd, it's
loose like. Not connected properly.
I move some fur aside and oh dear god what happened...
On either side of the vulva (where a buck testicles would be) is split open and doesn't appear to have been treated and is an older wound (not fresh, bleeding, or inflamed). The good news is it does NOT seem infected, which is a plus.
Her vulva itself appears normal and uninjured. But the skin on either side of it, is not.
My question is, can she be saved? Has anyone had ANYTHING like this before? Could she live a productive life is healed up again, or is this a birthing injury?
This may seem cruel and uncaring to most, but this rabbit is not a pet or a dear member of the family, she is livestock. While all my livestock receives the best care and food I can provide, I cannot afford taking her to a vet. At home treatment is my only option.
I have seriously considered putting her down, but after speaking to my dad I am also considering separating her from the other does and beginning treatment.
She is eating and drinking well, her poop is normal, urinating OK, does not seem lethargic, does not show any outward signs of severe pain (she actually slept in my arms while I was examining her).
Another thing I would like to address, if possible, is if she could possibly be productive, assuming she heals. I brought this up with my dad the other day, and while he was correct that this external injury doesn't affect the internal workings of the rabbit. I am concerned about scar tissue, and the fact that it does not stretch or really act anything like normal skin. Since this is in an area I would assume is stretched during birth...I'm wary about keeping her as a breeder, to say the least. But she COULD keep my pet bunny company inside...
I'm not jumping in this with no-prior-experience. I've successfully treated everything from puncture wounds to a tail ripped off a rat (she lived to the ripe old age of 2.5, old for a rat).
I would be able to treat her with rubbing alcohol, peroxide, triple antibiotic ointment, and Lanolin ointment (I don't know how I went without the stuff).
I also have 17% Sulfur salve, though I'm wary about it. I considered using it as well on my two sore-hocked rabbits, but I'm afraid they might somehow ingest it and get sick.
Any help is greatly appreciated, I'll be posting GRAPHIC (please BE AWARE OF THIS!) pictures soon to give you all a better idea of what I'm dealing with.
VERY urgent. Yesterday I bred all of my does for April kits, the buck did very well but refused to touch my thicker-furred grey doe. I went about breeding my other does and checked her later thinking she might really be a buck and the sellers were mistaken.
I flip her over, a bit underweight thats for sure, (mental increase of food, maybe temporary separation). Next thing I notice are the beginnings of a very nasty case of sore hocks. Alright. Treatable, I can handle that. Fur is a bit stained and tangled, but with her hocks the way they are I'm not too surprised.
After I check her to see if she's really a doe. Yes she is, but the skin and fur around her gentilia is odd, it's
loose like. Not connected properly.
I move some fur aside and oh dear god what happened...
On either side of the vulva (where a buck testicles would be) is split open and doesn't appear to have been treated and is an older wound (not fresh, bleeding, or inflamed). The good news is it does NOT seem infected, which is a plus.
Her vulva itself appears normal and uninjured. But the skin on either side of it, is not.
My question is, can she be saved? Has anyone had ANYTHING like this before? Could she live a productive life is healed up again, or is this a birthing injury?
This may seem cruel and uncaring to most, but this rabbit is not a pet or a dear member of the family, she is livestock. While all my livestock receives the best care and food I can provide, I cannot afford taking her to a vet. At home treatment is my only option.
I have seriously considered putting her down, but after speaking to my dad I am also considering separating her from the other does and beginning treatment.
She is eating and drinking well, her poop is normal, urinating OK, does not seem lethargic, does not show any outward signs of severe pain (she actually slept in my arms while I was examining her).
Another thing I would like to address, if possible, is if she could possibly be productive, assuming she heals. I brought this up with my dad the other day, and while he was correct that this external injury doesn't affect the internal workings of the rabbit. I am concerned about scar tissue, and the fact that it does not stretch or really act anything like normal skin. Since this is in an area I would assume is stretched during birth...I'm wary about keeping her as a breeder, to say the least. But she COULD keep my pet bunny company inside...
I'm not jumping in this with no-prior-experience. I've successfully treated everything from puncture wounds to a tail ripped off a rat (she lived to the ripe old age of 2.5, old for a rat).
I would be able to treat her with rubbing alcohol, peroxide, triple antibiotic ointment, and Lanolin ointment (I don't know how I went without the stuff).
I also have 17% Sulfur salve, though I'm wary about it. I considered using it as well on my two sore-hocked rabbits, but I'm afraid they might somehow ingest it and get sick.
Any help is greatly appreciated, I'll be posting GRAPHIC (please BE AWARE OF THIS!) pictures soon to give you all a better idea of what I'm dealing with.