I'm just doing a bit of reading, because I've never looked into it before.
From what I've read, it suggests that most rabbits are infected via their mother.
Reports state they have induced e.c. In lab mice.
A study says that wild mice tested in norway, 9% tested positive, then says lots of foxes on farms were positive and suspect it was due to mice, but not clear on how they figure the infection occurred?
That's me just flitting through things, apparently guinea pigs carry it too.
If the panacur only reduces the amount of spores, I assume you can never cure your rabbit?
I'm interested, because we lost Mustard our cat to toxoplasmosis, another protozoan disease, causing similar issues in cats as e.c does in rabbits, and carried by mice.
Again, most cats carry it and very few exhibit symptoms. It's usually affects young, immunocompromised or old cats, but Mustard was none of those.
I know I often sound aguementative but so often one thing is 'advertised' and it suddenly becomes fact, everybody, even vets believe it without looking at the whole picture, for example the recent study on rabbit museli, how dry cat food was at one time got for teeth, etc. it's never the whole picture.