Rabbit Red Eye (Conjunctivitis & Uveitis): Vet Guide for 2025 🐇🔴
In this article
Rabbit Red Eye (Conjunctivitis & Uveitis): Vet Guide for 2025 🐇🔴
By Dr Duncan Houston BVSc
📚 What Is Red Eye?
Red eye in rabbits refers to inflammation or infection affecting the conjunctiva, cornea, anterior chamber, or deeper ocular structures—leading to redness, discharge, squinting, and discomfort. Common forms include conjunctivitis, uveitis, glaucoma, corneal ulcers, and periocular abscesses.
This condition requires timely veterinary attention, as rabbits often hide pain until advanced stages.
⚠️ Why It Matters
- Eye pain leads to rubbing, tearing, and risk of corneal injury.
- May signal underlying diseases like dental abscesses, respiratory infection, trauma, or systemic illness.
- Without prompt care, chronic inflammation can cause scarring, vision loss, or glaucoma.
👀 Common Causes & Signs
- Conjunctivitis: red, swollen membrane, mucous or purulent discharge, blinking.
- Uveitis: deep pain, photophobia, cloudy or dull cornea, small pupil.
- Corneal ulcer: squinting, clear or blood-stained tear, visible corneal defect.
- Glaucoma: red eye with enlarged globe, cloudy cornea, vision loss.
- Dental abscess: root infection (e.g., maxillary incisors) causing tear duct blockage and epiphora (“red eye”).
- Trauma or foreign body: sudden redness, blinking, pawing the eye.
- Systemic disease: Encephalitozoon cuniculi, Pasteurella, or other infections may present with uveitis.
🔍 Diagnostic Approach
- History & exam: onset, discharge type, behavior, facial symmetry, eyelids.
- Fluorescein stain: checks for corneal ulcers.
- Tonometry: measure eye pressure when glaucoma suspected.
- Ophthalmologic exam: magnification to inspect iris, anterior chamber.
- Cytology/culture: from swabs to guide antibiotic therapy if purulent discharge present.
- Dental/radiographic imaging: assess tooth root pathology affecting the eye.
- Bloodwork: assess systemic health, E. cuniculi, Pasteurella titers.
🛠️ Treatment Options
1. Topical Therapy
- Antibiotic eye drops/ointments: broad-spectrum (e.g., chloramphenicol) for bacterial conjunctivitis or ulcer.
- Anti-inflammatory drops: low-dose NSAID or corticosteroid (safe only after ulcer ruled out) for uveitis.
- Lubricants/artificial tears: maintain corneal health, aid ulcer healing.
- Pressure-lowering agents: topical for glaucoma (e.g., dorzolamide).
2. Systemic Therapy
- Oral antibiotics: guided by culture/sensitivity or used empirically for deeper infections.
- Pain management: analgesics (NSAIDs, opioids) especially post-ulcer or surgical procedures.
- Antiparasitic or antiechinococcal treatment: if E. cuniculi suspected.
3. Surgical Intervention
- Corneal debridement or conjunctival grafting: for deep ulcers.
- Glaucoma surgery: drainage/shunts in refractory cases.
- Dental abscess drainage/extraction: when root infection leads to ocular signs.
🏠 Home & Nursing Care
- Administer prescribed eye meds gently; avoid contamination.
- Clean around the eye with warm saline and soft gauze.
- Ensure rest, calm, and minimal irritants (avoid bright lights, dust).
- Provide nutrition support if eating decreases due to pain.
- Use Elizabethan collar when bilateral or self-trauma occurs.
- Keep follow-up visits to monitor healing; pressure checks if glaucoma.
📊 Prognosis & Outlook
- Superficial conjunctivitis usually resolves within 7–14 days.
- Corneal ulcers need intensive care; healing times vary (2–6 weeks).
- Uveitis and glaucoma may require long-term therapy and present guarded prognosis.
- Prompt treatment of dental abscess can restore ocular function.
- Delayed care may result in permanent vision loss or chronic pain.
🛡️ Prevention Tips
- Regular dental exams to avoid root encroachment on the eye.
- Environmental safety—avoid wire flooring, dusty bedding, sharp objects that can injure the eye.
- Routine wellness checks to catch early ocular issues.
- Keep rabbits indoors or in sheltered areas to reduce exposure to environmental irritants or trauma.
🧠 Vet Tips for 2025
- Train owners to photograph eye changes—redness, discharge, asymmetry.
- Include basic ophthalmic exam in wellness checks.
- Provide discharge kits with saline wipes, lubricant, dropper schedules.
- Coordinate with dental team for suspected odontogenic causes.
- Offer telehealth follow-ups for eye medication adherence and healing progress.
🔚 Final Takeaway
Red eye in rabbits can stem from minor irritation or serious systemic disease. In 2025, early veterinary diagnosis, proper ocular and dental evaluation, targeted topical/systemic or surgical therapy, and diligent home care are essential to preserve comfort and vision. With attentive monitoring, most cases recover fully or can be managed long-term. 🐇❤️
🌟 Partner Services
- Ask A Vet: Remote guidance on eye examination, drop technique, scheduling follow-ups, and ophthalmic advice.
- Woopf: Rabbit eye-care kits with saline swabs, lubricants, clean cloths, and calm lighting solutions.
- Purrz: Anti-inflammatory eye drops, nutritional ocular supplements, and printed care protocol reminders.