Treatment and Prevention of Heatstroke in Rabbits.
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Sparky
FluffSlave
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Treatment and Prevention of Heatstroke in Rabbits.
Found this on the internet and it may be helpful to some.
Whether your rabbit is indoors or out, one concern that all rabbits share is their rabbit's reaction to the sweltering summer heat.
Looking at the makeup of the common domestic rabbit, one sees that he is completely covered from head to toe in a thick fur coat. This leaves no way for the rabbit to perspire. There are virtually no means of which the rabbit can cool his body temperature. Not only is it uncomfortable for your rabbit, it can also be extremely dangerous to his health, even fatal. Rabbits and heat are never a good combination, and heat stroke is one of the leading causes of death in rabbits. Fortunately it can easily be avoided, even if you do not have air conditioning.
Before we venture into prevention and treatment, let us delve into the signs and symptoms that help you recognize that your rabbit has or is beginning to get heat stroke.
*The rabbit is fully stretched out. The feet are sprawled apart and the tail is limp.
*Eyes are half closed. The rabbit has a sleepy or dazed appearance.
*The rabbit's tongue is hanging out. His breathing is rapid and possibly labored.
*The rabbit is reluctant to move.
*The rabbit refuses to eat or drink. -If your rabbit ever refuses to eat or drink for more then 6 hours get them to a vet immediately!
Prevention against the summer heat is key to your rabbit's comfort and survival. Prevention will save you both stress and is simple enough to do.
~WAYS TO PREVENT HEAT STROKE: ~
Fill two to three one or two liter bottles about eighty percent full with water and freeze them. Take one out, wrap in paper towels or with a thin, clean rag that you won't care to be chewed upon. Place this in your rabbit's pen. This will last between four and eight hours before you will need to replace it with a new one. Place the thawed bottle back in the freezer so that you may use it again. Your rabbit will lay next to, or even on this bottle and get great relief from the heat.
Place a 12 inch by 12 inch ceramic tile in your rabbit's pen for her to lie on. If you place the tile in the refridgerator for an hour beforehand it will provide even greater relief.
Put ice cubes in your rabbit's water dish. I recommend spill proof dishes in the hottest part of summer over water bottles as the crockery holds the temperature making it less likely that your rabbit will have to drink warm or even hot water. Keep your rabbit in clean, fresh water at all times.
Place a cold, damp towel over a fan directed at your rabbit's pen. As the water evaporates it will help keep your rabbit cool.
If your rabbit seems to already be suffering from the heat - try the following:
Rub chilled, damp fingers over the rabbit's ears repeatedly. Rechill the fingers every few strokes (ice cubes work best for this task). You may also try a cool, damp (not wet) cotton ball inside the exposed area of your rabbit's ears. Take care not to drip water down into the ears. A rabbit's ears are very sensitive and a major vasculatory structure. Cooling off the rabbit's ears helps to cool off the entire rabbit.
Soak a towel in cool (not cold) water and drape it over your rabbit. Colder is not better as it may throw your rabbit into shock. Hopefully your rabbit will not resist this process. If she does, do not fight her on it. The stress will only aggravate the situation.
The advice here is not meant to supercede that of your vet.
Whether your rabbit is indoors or out, one concern that all rabbits share is their rabbit's reaction to the sweltering summer heat.
Looking at the makeup of the common domestic rabbit, one sees that he is completely covered from head to toe in a thick fur coat. This leaves no way for the rabbit to perspire. There are virtually no means of which the rabbit can cool his body temperature. Not only is it uncomfortable for your rabbit, it can also be extremely dangerous to his health, even fatal. Rabbits and heat are never a good combination, and heat stroke is one of the leading causes of death in rabbits. Fortunately it can easily be avoided, even if you do not have air conditioning.
Before we venture into prevention and treatment, let us delve into the signs and symptoms that help you recognize that your rabbit has or is beginning to get heat stroke.
*The rabbit is fully stretched out. The feet are sprawled apart and the tail is limp.
*Eyes are half closed. The rabbit has a sleepy or dazed appearance.
*The rabbit's tongue is hanging out. His breathing is rapid and possibly labored.
*The rabbit is reluctant to move.
*The rabbit refuses to eat or drink. -If your rabbit ever refuses to eat or drink for more then 6 hours get them to a vet immediately!
Prevention against the summer heat is key to your rabbit's comfort and survival. Prevention will save you both stress and is simple enough to do.
~WAYS TO PREVENT HEAT STROKE: ~
Fill two to three one or two liter bottles about eighty percent full with water and freeze them. Take one out, wrap in paper towels or with a thin, clean rag that you won't care to be chewed upon. Place this in your rabbit's pen. This will last between four and eight hours before you will need to replace it with a new one. Place the thawed bottle back in the freezer so that you may use it again. Your rabbit will lay next to, or even on this bottle and get great relief from the heat.
Place a 12 inch by 12 inch ceramic tile in your rabbit's pen for her to lie on. If you place the tile in the refridgerator for an hour beforehand it will provide even greater relief.
Put ice cubes in your rabbit's water dish. I recommend spill proof dishes in the hottest part of summer over water bottles as the crockery holds the temperature making it less likely that your rabbit will have to drink warm or even hot water. Keep your rabbit in clean, fresh water at all times.
Place a cold, damp towel over a fan directed at your rabbit's pen. As the water evaporates it will help keep your rabbit cool.
If your rabbit seems to already be suffering from the heat - try the following:
Rub chilled, damp fingers over the rabbit's ears repeatedly. Rechill the fingers every few strokes (ice cubes work best for this task). You may also try a cool, damp (not wet) cotton ball inside the exposed area of your rabbit's ears. Take care not to drip water down into the ears. A rabbit's ears are very sensitive and a major vasculatory structure. Cooling off the rabbit's ears helps to cool off the entire rabbit.
Soak a towel in cool (not cold) water and drape it over your rabbit. Colder is not better as it may throw your rabbit into shock. Hopefully your rabbit will not resist this process. If she does, do not fight her on it. The stress will only aggravate the situation.
The advice here is not meant to supercede that of your vet.
Tuckerbunnies- Elder Hopper
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Re: Treatment and Prevention of Heatstroke in Rabbits.
Thanks for this Maysie
I'm really worrying about moving my two outdoors as it is just so hot at the moment. Especially for Mojo now his coat is 100% grown back
This is a really useful read, though
I'm really worrying about moving my two outdoors as it is just so hot at the moment. Especially for Mojo now his coat is 100% grown back
This is a really useful read, though
FluffSlave- Senior Hopper
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Re: Treatment and Prevention of Heatstroke in Rabbits.
If you go to any DIY place like Homebase or B&Q you can usually by a box of big marble tiles which work out cheaper than some single cooling tiles that you can by for pets. That's what we do.
Last edited by Tuckerbunnies on Mon Jul 15, 2013 5:39 pm; edited 1 time in total
Tuckerbunnies- Elder Hopper
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Re: Treatment and Prevention of Heatstroke in Rabbits.
Great advice, thanks Maysie
Humum has been looking at those pressure-reactive self-cooling pads, has anyone tried them?
Humum has been looking at those pressure-reactive self-cooling pads, has anyone tried them?
Sparky- Senior Hopper
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Re: Treatment and Prevention of Heatstroke in Rabbits.
Sparky wrote:Great advice, thanks Maysie
Humum has been looking at those pressure-reactive self-cooling pads, has anyone tried them?
No but I've heard they are not bad I think Pets @ Home are replacing their ice pods with the cooling pads.
Tuckerbunnies- Elder Hopper
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Re: Treatment and Prevention of Heatstroke in Rabbits.
I think we found them on Vet UK for about £7 each (decent size ones)...
Sparky- Senior Hopper
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Re: Treatment and Prevention of Heatstroke in Rabbits.
Sparky wrote:I think we found them on Vet UK for about £7 each (decent size ones)...
Oh we have an account with vet's Uk as it's not that far from us so we like to use them, I shall have a look at them
Tuckerbunnies- Elder Hopper
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Sparky- Senior Hopper
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Location : Outside Theo's baby gate
Registration date : 2011-08-07
Re: Treatment and Prevention of Heatstroke in Rabbits.
I've just ordered two of those ... See how they go!
KatieB- Elder Hopper
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Re: Treatment and Prevention of Heatstroke in Rabbits.
Please let me know how those cool pads go, guys
We're postponing the move and seeing if temperatures cool off a bit, as it's VERY stuffy in the shed at the moment and they'd be going from the coolest room in the house to that, which isn't very fair.
We're postponing the move and seeing if temperatures cool off a bit, as it's VERY stuffy in the shed at the moment and they'd be going from the coolest room in the house to that, which isn't very fair.
FluffSlave- Senior Hopper
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Re: Treatment and Prevention of Heatstroke in Rabbits.
thanks! this is great advice
paullp- Established Hopper
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Re: Treatment and Prevention of Heatstroke in Rabbits.
This is great advice love, many thanks. Binky-Boo and the others are fine we keep checking on them and changing their water frequently.
Hugs
JO xx
Hugs
JO xx
jolovesbunnies- Elder Hopper
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Re: Treatment and Prevention of Heatstroke in Rabbits.
Thank you Maysie that's great advice
Rachel&Nibbler- Established Hopper
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