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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Conformation-associated health in pet rabbits in the UK: A VetCompass cohort study.

Journal:
The Veterinary record
Year:
2024
Authors:
O'Neill, Dan G et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Pathobiology and Population Sciences · United Kingdom
Species:
rabbit

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Domestic rabbit breeds vary substantially from the wild rabbit body type. However, little is known about how the conformation of pet rabbits influences their health. METHODS: Data were extracted from VetCompass anonymised clinical records of rabbits under UK primary veterinary care during 2019. RESULTS: The study included 162,107 rabbits. Based on 88,693 rabbits with relevant breed information recorded, skull shape was classified as brachycephalic (79.69%), mesaticephalic (16.80%) and dolichocephalic (3.51%). Based on 83,821 rabbits with relevant breed information recorded, ear carriage was classified as lop-eared (57.05%) and erect-eared (42.95%). From a random sample of 3933 rabbits, the most prevalent disorders recorded overall were overgrown nail(s) (28.19%), overgrown molar(s) (14.90%) and obesity (8.82%). Compared to those with a mesaticephalic skull shape, brachycephalic rabbits had lower odds of obesity, anorexia and gastrointestinal stasis and higher odds of perineal faecal impaction, tear duct abnormality and haircoat disorder. Compared to erect-eared rabbits, lop-eared rabbits had higher odds of perineal faecal impaction and tear duct abnormality. LIMITATION: A large proportion of records with incomplete breed information hindered full analysis for breed-related and conformation-related attributes. CONCLUSION: Limited evidence for major links between skull shape or ear carriage conformations and overall disorder risk suggests that factors such as husbandry or even just living life as a domesticated species may be bigger drivers of common health issues in pet rabbits in the UK.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38978404/