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No. Pink eye is a common name for epidemic viral keratoconjunctivitis.
Eyelid edema at onset. Corneal conjunctival injection. Red and swollen.
So it's called pink eye.
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Rabbits with pink eye will have tears and a lot of droppings in their eyes.
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Hehe, of course not. In fact, rabbit eyes are not all red, most of them are black and blue.
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Mites fungal disease**.
Tularemia, a gram-negative polymorphic bacterium, can infect guinea pigs, mice, rabbits, monkeys, and squirrels, and sometimes in domestic and wild animals, often causing a drastic decline in rodents and rabbits, and later found to be infected.
If rabbits suffer from mite fungi such diseases, in addition to scabies mites, rabbit scabies mites will be infectious, rabbits need to be cautious in free-range breeding, and other common diseases have no effect on healthy and normal adults, of course, it is not excluded that some **sensitive people will have some discomfort, after all, there are a lot of animal hair allergy patients.
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Amber's Comedy Academy Animals grow bacteria and viruses that can be transmitted to humans through air, water, and contact, so you need to vaccinate the rabbit so that it doesn't infect people?
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Hello, rabbits generally don't have infectious diseases. If you take it out and get infected by another animal, then there will be an infectious disease! And rabbits are generally coccidiosis, but this is not contagious.
If you have coccidiosis, it's okay, and generally only ** disease can be infected, and that kind of thing is enough.
The common pathogenic bacteria of rabbits and rabbits are different from human pathogenic bacteria, as long as we usually pay attention to environmental hygiene, clean frequently, and pay attention to disinfection, it is basically OK, and there is no need to worry too much.
If you have any other questions, you can go to the [Rabbit Bar Back Garden Forum] to ask.
I hope I can help, thank you.
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The main reason is that it is afraid that it carries the rabies virus, and you can go to the CDC in advance to inject rabies vaccine to prevent the disease.
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Yes! Ringworm of rabbits, i.e. fungus.
Without further ado, let's read a report.
Let's do it! Also** (Be careful.)
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Let's raise a dog, rabbits, like mice, can't have such deep feelings for people. It is difficult to teach a rabbit to go to the toilet in a designated place on its own.
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Rabbits are not contagious.
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In rabbit breeding, we must first pay attention to breeding methods and technologies, and secondly, we must learn the prevention and control of diseases. Therefore, raising rabbits is also a science that does not smile. Conjunctivitis.
It is a common disease in breeding rabbits. I want to use conjunctivitis today. As an example, let's talk about issues related to rabbit diseases.
Conjunctivitis, also known as pink eye.
It is a serious acute contact infection that can harm rabbits. The conjunctiva and cornea have significant signs of inflammation, and sticky droppings cover the eyes. Conjunctivitis, also known as pink eye, is a severe acute and contact infection that can harm rabbits.
The conjunctiva and cornea have obvious symptoms of inflammation, and the eye droppings are sticky and cover the eyes.
1.Pathogenesis Pasteurella is commonly found in the mucous membranes and tonsils of the upper respiratory tract in healthy rabbits.
But it does not get sick. Poor feeding control and hygiene can lead to stressors such as drastic changes in weather, overcrowding and long-distance transportation, reduced physical resistance in rabbits, and unintentional growth of Pasteurella bacteria causing endogenous ** infection, which can lead to disease. Damage to the respiratory, gastrointestinal, **, and mucous membranes is the route of transmission.
Sick rabbits and their contaminated feed, drinking water, cooking utensils, and secretions and excretions from blood-sucking insects are carriers of the disease. The disease is easily transmitted throughout the year, and the incidence of rabbits of different breeds and ages increases, especially young rabbits that have just been weaned.
2.The incubation period of symptoms is 2-7 days. At the beginning of the disease, rabbits are reluctant to open their eyes. Significant swelling, tearing, pain, eye drops appear in the conjunctiva, eyelids, and transient membranes.
or white or gray spots on the cornea. In severe cases, the cornea thickens and ulcers form.
Causes corneal scarring and ponchos. Sick rabbits generally have no systemic symptoms, but when the eyeball is suppurated, the body temperature rises, the appetite decreases, and the spirit is listless. Some sick rabbits can go blind if left untimely.
3.Rabbits should be vaccinated against pasteurella regularly and on time. If symptoms appear, they should be prompted** to avoid aggravation. With erythromycin.
or rifampicin eye drops chloramphenicol.
Syrup**, the effect is noticeable after 3 days. However, continue to use the drug until everything goes well to prevent **.
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At this time, you should prescribe the right medicine in time, and then you should do a good job of disinfection and isolation, you should use normal saline for cleaning, and you can take your pet to the doctor.
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First of all, make sure that the environment where the rabbit is located is ventilated, and then give the sick rabbit anti-inflammatory eye drops.
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If you have pink eye, it's best to have a veterinarian do it** and isolate the sick rabbit.
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I was bitten on my finger by a rabbit rat used in an experiment, should I get a rabies vaccine?
Students, first of all, I would like to warn you that experimental animals should be strictly managed to avoid accidental injury; All bites should be treated first, promptly and thoroughly. Experimental animals are generally strictly managed and do not come into contact with the external environment, and some are still at the SPF (no special pathogen) level, they are not infected at all, do not have the conditions to transmit or be infected with rabies, and do not need to be vaccinated against rabies. Of course, if it is an animal infected by a specific pathogen, it must be disposed of in accordance with the regulations.
Not only medically, but also for violations of laboratory safety discipline.)
Bitten by rabbits, squirrels, chinchillas, house mice, hedgehogs, chickens, fish, parrots, lizards, cockroaches, non-venomous snakes, mosquitoes, should I get a rabies vaccine? (The doctor is also about to collapse, do you live in a primeval forest?) )
Rabbits bite when they are anxious, and if they are bitten by house mice, chinchillas, rabbits, and chickens, should they be vaccinated against rabies?
According to the WHO report, "Examinations of thousands of wild and residential rodents in rabies-endemic areas of North America and Europe have shown that rabies infection in rodents is rare, suggesting that these animals are not reservoirs for the disease." "Exposure to rodents such as rabbits and hares rarely requires specific anti-rabies post-exposure prophylaxis.
Rabbits are indeed highly susceptible to rabies virus infection, and the world's earliest rabies vaccine was made from artificially infected rabbit brain tissue. But in nature, rabbits have very few chances of being infected by the rabies virus. Years of foreign surveillance of thousands of wild animals (including rabbits) in rabies-endemic areas of North America and Europe have shown that rabbit infection with the rabies virus is rare.
The rabies virus was accidentally detected in a very small number of rabbits in the Americas, and subsequent genetic identification proved that it was a raccoon, indicating that rabbits were not the storage host of the rabies virus. The probability of being bitten by a rabbit and causing rabies can be said to be lower than the probability of winning the lottery jackpot.
The chances of humans being bitten by rats are high – accounting for 3-10 of all animal injuries. Regarding the disposal of rat bites, China's Ministry of Health has not yet issued relevant work specifications.
There are occasional reports of rabies cases of rat-to-human and rabbit-to-human transmission in Chinese literature reports, but the identification of injured animals depends on the oral recollection of patients or their families, and the scientific value is limited, and the total number is very small. After summarizing the data, I believe that the above views of the WHO are also basically applicable to China.
Although the next ** chapter was retrieved, the article in the primary health center in the 80s itself has a very low reference, although the patient was bitten by a rabbit, it took half a year to get sick, I don't know if he was bitten by other animals during the period, just take a look.
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Answer: All kinds of domestic animals, poultry and small mammals are susceptible to rabies, and all kinds of wild animals can be infected, in short, almost all warm-blooded animals, including poultry, can be infected with rabies. An animal is more susceptible to rabies transmitted by the same animal. The susceptibility of animals to the rabies virus is as follows:
Most sensitive: foxes, mountain dogs, wolf-like-minded, jackals, wolves, kangaroos and cotton rats. Sensitive:
Gophers, skunks, raccoons, mongooses, bats, mongooses, guinea pigs, rabbits, and other rodents. Moderately sensitive: dogs, cattle, horses, sheep and primates.
Low sensitivity: opossums. Therefore, rabbits can also carry the rabies virus.
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Any wild animal or an aggressive animal will bring rabies or the like, because this kind of disease is caused by animals, so any animal bite must go to the hospital for disinfection and injection.
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I have been a mother before, and it is said that there is no such case.
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Probably not, please ask the next Du Niang.
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Rabbits can be infected with diseases, which are mainly parasites and fungi, such as coccidiosis, toxoplasmosis, mites, fungi, etc.
If rabbits suffer from mite fungi such diseases, in addition to scabies mites, rabbit scabies mites will be infectious, rabbits need to be cautious in free-range breeding, and other common diseases have no effect on healthy and normal adults, of course, it is not excluded that some **sensitive people will have some discomfort, after all, there are a lot of animal hair allergy patients. Rabbit disease is not contagious to humans, most rabbit diseases, such as rabbit plague, rabbit coccidiosis and other more serious rabbit diseases, will only be transmitted between the same kind, there is no impact on humans.
Even if it is bitten, if it is a home-raised rabbit that knows the roots, then it can be rinsed with soap and water for 15 minutes, and the wound is deep and dirty, and the tetanus injection can be given, and there is no need to vaccinate against rabies. Healthy rabbits are generally clean, because rabbits are super clean animals, if the fur is always dirty, then it is necessary to introspect whether the breeding environment is clean. The rabbit's toilet should be dumped and cleaned in time, and the cage should also be cleaned and disinfected by the call, and the rabbit likes to drill all kinds of corners, so some sanitary dead corners at home should also pay attention to cleaning and hygiene, such as behind the sofa and under the bed.
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Rabbit diseases can be transmitted to humans, these diseases are mainly parasites, fungi, such as coccidiosis, toxoplasmosis, mites, fungi, etc., and other diseases are difficult to transmit to humans.
Some of the diseases that rabbits have may be transmitted to humans, such as coccidiosis, toxoplasmosis, mites, fungi, fecal bacteria, etc. Some people with sensitive constitution may also be allergic to rabbit hair, which is manifested as itching and rashes on the body.
In addition, it is possible to be infected with tetanus after being scratched by rabbits, so it is necessary to clean the wound with alcohol and iodophor in time after being scratched, and when the wound area is too large or the wound is too deep, it is also necessary to inject tetanus vaccine with a round of repentance.
I can tell you with certainty that it's pink eye! It's the early stage, and it hasn't broken out yet! Hurry up and get eye drops! >>>More
1. What is pink eye Pink eye is a common form of acute epidemic conjunctivitis caused by a bacterial infection. Outbreaks often occur in spring and summer. It is characterized by acute onset and strong contagion. >>>More
In the early days, I felt that my eyes were hot, burning, photophobic, and red, and I felt that my eyes were painful, and the pain was unbearable like entering sand, followed by red and swollen eyelids, many eyelids, fear of light, and tears, and when I got up in the morning, my eyelids were often stuck by secretions and were not easy to open. Some people have small bleeding spots or hemorrhagic spots on the conjunctiva, and the discharge is mucopurulent, sometimes a gray-white pseudomembrane is formed on the surface of the palpebral conjunctiva, and there may be gray-white infiltration spots on the corneal edge, and severe cases can be accompanied by headache, fever, fatigue, preauricular lymphadenopathy and other systemic symptoms.
Pink eye is medically called acute catarrhal conjunctivitis, and its transmission route is mainly through contact infection. It is often transmitted by touching the patient's eye secretions or tear-stained objects (such as towels, handkerchiefs, basins, water, etc.), shaking hands with the patient with red eye, or rubbing the eyes with dirty hands, etc., and eventually cause the epidemic of pink eye. In summer and autumn, due to the hot weather, bacteria are easy to grow and multiply, which is very easy to cause pandemics. >>>More
Viral infections are the most common causes of acute conjunctivitis, and bacterial infections can also cause symptoms of acute conjunctivitis. It is mainly caused by contact with the infection, so it is recommended that the general public must wash their hands frequently. There are many classifications of chronic conjunctivitis, but most of the common ones in outpatient clinics are chronic conjunctivitis caused by allergies. >>>More