Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
CT scans help diagnose eye problems in pet rabbits
By Goossens, Lauren-Tess et al.·Published in Veterinary ophthalmology·2026·Ophthalmology Department, Netherlands·View original on PubMed →
PetCaseFinder translated the abstract of this peer-reviewed paper into plain English so pet owners can read it. We do not publish original research — every detail traces back to the citation above. How we work →
Original publication title: The Use of CT Scan as a Diagnostic Tool in Pet Rabbits Presenting With Signs of Ophthalmic Disease.
- Species:
- rabbit
Plain-English summary
A rabbit was brought in with eye problems, specifically showing signs like watery eyes and bulging eyes. A CT scan was performed to investigate these symptoms, revealing that most of the rabbits had eye issues related to their tear ducts and other eye structures. Many of these rabbits also had dental problems, even if they hadn't shown any signs of dental issues before. The CT scans helped veterinarians understand the connection between the eye problems and other health issues, leading to better treatment options for the rabbits.
People also search for: rabbit eye problems · CT scan for rabbit eye issues · rabbit dental disease symptoms · rabbit watery eyes treatment
Abstract
PURPOSE: To describe the findings of computed tomography (CT) used to investigate signs of ophthalmic disease in pet rabbits. METHODS: Retrospective review of records of patients with signs of ophthalmic disease that underwent CT scans in three referral centers between 2001 and 2022. Signalment, presenting ophthalmic and nonophthalmic complaints, CT findings, and restrain modality were recorded. RESULTS: There were 85 rabbits representing 14 breeds including 28/85 (32.9%) crossbreed/unknown and 25/85 (29.4%) Dwarf rabbits. The top presenting ophthalmic complaints were ocular discharge (48/85, 56.5%), exophthalmos (34/85, 40%), and epiphora (14/85, 16.5%), while 38/85 (44.7%) rabbits also had nonophthalmic complaints. Anesthetic complications forced 1/85 (1.18%) CTs to be stopped. There were ophthalmic abnormalities in the remaining 81/84 (96.4%) CTs with exophthalmos and/or nasolacrimal duct disease affecting 76/81 (93.8%) rabbits and 68/81 (84%) also showing nonophthalmic abnormalities. Ophthalmic abnormalities were seen with nonophthalmic disease in 64/81 (79%) rabbits with dental disease being the most common (52/64, 81.3%) although only 20/52 (38.5%) had presented with dental complaints. No association was found between the presence of exophthalmos and/or NLD disease and dental disease. There were no obvious image artifacts in the 4/84 (4.8%) physically restrained patients. CONCLUSION: Examination with CT in the present study mainly supported the investigation of ocular discharge, exophthalmos, and epiphora, and of possible local and systemic involvement in one eye with intraocular neoplasia. Adnexal disease was often seen with previously unknown, nonophthalmic pathology, which warrants prospective, controlled studies. Image quality studies in a large number of physically restrained patients are also warranted.
Find similar cases for your pet
PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.
Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39905602/