First aid for rabbits

Choking

 * vgr1, Choking
 * Bunny Guy's Blog, Bunny EMT Skills: How to Help a Choking Rabbit
 * Missouri House Rabbit Society - St. Louis, Helpful Information, search for 'The "Bunny Heimlich" for Choking Rabbits'

E-collars
E-collars (AKA elizabethan collars or ecollars) are occasionally used for rabbits to prevent them from chewing on stitches, incisions, or the rest of their body in general. Most of the time, a hard e-collar is not very practical due to the inability to eat their cecals and movement difficulty. Other alternatives made with socks and other objects are often more comfortable for rabbits.

Some more resources on using e-collars and alternatives for rabbits:
 * Special Bunny, Surgeries
 * u/CandidDeer. (2019). Marilyn sporting her mint green Medical Pet Shirt a few days after her spay. Her surgery was last Wednesday. Mary is happy to have had her onesie and sutures removed today. Here's to further good recovery!
 * u/CandidDeer. (2019). Before her mint green onesie, Mary had been wearing this here, made out of one of my leggings. So cute looking, but it wasn't practical.
 * Francis & Charlie. (2013). Medical Pet Shirt: alternative to an e-collar (recommendation/review)

Some e-collars and alternatives available for purchase:


 * Soft ecollar on Amazon
 * MAXX Medical Pet Clothing & Recovery Rabbit Shirt E Collar Alternative for Post Surgery, Wounds and Bandages

Syringe feeding
When a rabbit needs nutritional support, syringe feeding with a liquid food is often effective. Oral nutritional support provides calories, nutrients, electrolytes, and fluids as well as help to rehydrate stomach contents and stimulate normal GI motility. The recommended intake is 50ml/kg body weight divided into 3-5 meals per day.

Critical Care is what is commonly fed to rabbits requiring nutritional support. This product can be obtained from your vet or some pet stores and online retailers. Otherwise, you can use your rabbit's normal pellet feed and grind it to powder and mix 1:1.5 with water to form a paste for feeding. Any remaining formula may be refrigerated for 48 hours.

For further instructions in syringe feeding methodology, see Medicating your rabbit.