Hi there
I'm sorry, abscesses (especially jaw) are difficult, I cannot lie.
I have dealt with dozens of them, but the good news is that many of them have a successful outcome
There is never 'one size fits all" with rabbit abscesses. In the past - when bicillin was briefly used here in the uk - abscesses were very bad news indeed. I have had many rabbits with abscesses and the care has got so much better since the early 2000's.
There are several options you can choose from. Your rabbit can have surgery (plus x-rays if you like), and perhaps have antibiotic beads sewn into the wound site. Then what often happens is they take a long course of antibiotics. Possibly a long acting penicillin - this is the only legal version here in the UK. Bicillin is only possible on a 'named patient' version. By the time you get the permit to give a rabbit Bicillin, it may be too late ...
One option I have tried several times recently is the 'lance and drain' technique. It's light sedation for the rabbit as opposed to a GA and big operation. The abscess can be lanced under light sedation, and drained. You as the owner will then have to clean this out, and perhaps pack the cavity with high grade Manuka Honey to keep it clean and promote healing. This would have to be done for up to two weeks in order to let the wound heal from the inside out. Injectable penicillin can also be given every day to begin with - you can do these yourself. The injections may become every other day and continue for several months.
Some people are against this 'lance and drain' method, and say that it doesn't work, but my rabbits are living proof that it *does* work. My rabbits using this method have not had a recurrence of the abscess many years later. It does however involve a lot of 'hands on work' for you and your rabbit may not like it either.
This is a long essay - sorry Please PM me if I can help further ...... I hope it gives you a bit more perspective on something that is very common in rabbits and is no longer necessarily a death sentence.
And some bedtime reading .....
http://www.all-creatures.com/blog-Ab...n+Rabbits.html
http://www.medirabbit.com/EN/Dental_...abs_dental.htm
http://www.rabbitwelfare.co.uk/resou.../abscesses.htm
http://rabbit.org/abcesses-in-rabbits/
http://www.ivis.org/proceedings/navc...E/615.pdf?LA=1
http://www.medirabbit.com/EN/Dental_..._dentistry.pdf
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