Veterinary care of a giant lop rabbit with severe fly strike from (I kid you not) World Wide Wounds
I should be treated so well if I got a severe flystrike!
Veterinary care of a giant lop rabbit with severe fly strike from (I kid you not) World Wide Wounds
I should be treated so well if I got a severe flystrike!
Oh good g-d, the poor thing was being eaten alive. “Significant numbers of first- and second-stage larvae were present.”(!!!)
Yes, I would hope that someone would take the time to dig the maggots out of my @ss too.
Yay!
That was actually an impressive page. It’s one of those where you’re not sure if you want to feel sorry for the rabbit or really happy that he got so well mended and cared for.
That’s so gross.
Zigzackly! My first thought was “oh not a happy bunny”, then I realised that it probably was very happy if a bit bemused after all the treatment,.
I didn’t realize that fly maggot would eat flesh off a living animal. Is it the same species as musca domestica?
Blue Pitbull - Maggots usually just eat dead flesh, the problem is that on a living animal, once they’ve cleaned out the open wound, the flesh around it usually keeps dying so there is always more to eat. At some point I think they stop being too picky about whether the flesh is dead or not. They seem to think that buttholes are dead flesh - and the other openings in that general area.
Sage Rat - I always hated that line from Addicted to Love. Maggots don’t lay eggs, flies lay eggs which become maggots.
I’ve picked many a maggot out of wounds before. Somehow I always get stuck with that job, I think it’s because I’m the only one who doesn’t immediately start dry-heaving at the sight of maggotty wounds. I used to and still do sometimes but most of the time I’ve learned to disconnect my brain and just think about them as debris that needs to be cleaned from the wound - dsgusting wriggling debris. That’s what I get for my 20 plus years in the vet. tech. business - all the maggots I can pick.
When my (now-deceased) mare had melanom, the flies would get into the gaping tumor and lay eggs. I kept trying to keep them out with fly sheets and an aerosol spray specifically for that, but finally my vet said to let them alone - they could clean out the dead tissue. We were trying to keep my mare alive long enough to deliver her foal, but the melanoma killed her about two weeks before we were going to deliver the baby by C-section. It was a long, hard, often disgusting journey that was ultimately fruitless.
StG